T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
88.2 | | CAMONE::WAY | Cheez-Whiz, Choice of Champions | Thu Jan 28 1993 14:04 | 6 |
| Well, I, for one, think that there will always be a place in the Majors
for a team with old, slow players.
'Saw
|
88.3 | yeah 'Saw, it's called the basement | FRETZ::HEISER | FREE Dallas Cowboy hats! | Thu Jan 28 1993 14:36 | 1 |
|
|
88.4 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Carolina Blew | Thu Jan 28 1993 15:15 | 4 |
| Bruno Sammartino signed with the Brewers? The guy's got to
be at least 89 years old! Looks like the Sox let one get away.
/Don
|
88.5 | yuppy alert! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabee | Thu Jan 28 1993 15:24 | 11 |
|
Heiser, you faux cultured yuppy!
iz called "da cellar"
;^)
I remain,
a defender of the culture-less!
Dannon_for_Kev
|
88.6 | Make that old, slow players who cain't hit | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jan 28 1993 16:36 | 1 |
|
|
88.7 | | CAMONE::WAY | Cheez-Whiz, Choice of Champions | Thu Jan 28 1993 16:39 | 9 |
| > -< Make that old, slow players who cain't hit >-
Yep, I forgot that most important clause......
'Saw
|
88.8 | besides, I don't make enough either | FRETZ::HEISER | FREE Dallas Cowboy hats! | Thu Jan 28 1993 17:08 | 2 |
| Hey Farley take that back! I don't own a Volvo and don't wear velour
clothing!
|
88.9 | | PLUGH::NEEDLE | Money talks. Mine says "Good-Bye!" | Fri Jan 29 1993 12:09 | 6 |
| �Well, I, for one, think that there will always be a place in the Majors
�for a team with old, slow players.
�
�'Saw
Yeah, always nice to have a team you can identify with, huh 'Saw :-)?
|
88.10 | Expensive rehab in Caracas | CTHQ::LEARY | US:WorldCop,WillPuffChestForMoney | Tue Feb 09 1993 08:18 | 9 |
| Well I feel comfortable this morning knowing that Carlos Quintana
is looking for a $510,000. increase in salary from his base pay of
$340K or so. Musta had a great year last year. Anyone know what he
hit last year (besides that tree in Venezuela)?
Wish I was arbiter in this one. NEXT....
MikeL
|
88.11 | park effects are REAL! | FRETZ::HEISER | raise your voice in shouts of joy | Mon Mar 22 1993 15:09 | 2 |
| What does everyone think about the MIT dude's theory about the
skybox-wind-shifts causing the degradation in home runs?
|
88.12 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Mar 22 1993 15:11 | 5 |
| re: .11
You're assuming we care :-)
The Crazy Met
|
88.13 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | UNC-ExcellentLossInWaiting | Mon Mar 22 1993 15:23 | 4 |
| I think the lack of major league hitters caused the degradation
of homeruns in Fenway.
/Don
|
88.14 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Mar 22 1993 15:32 | 4 |
| � What does everyone think about the MIT dude's theory about the
� skybox-wind-shifts causing the degradation in home runs?
Are they still using the Pony Express to get news out west?
|
88.15 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | MARCHMadness, Fall ofthe UNC Empire | Mon Mar 22 1993 16:00 | 4 |
| I hear my man Roj is throwing smoke all over the grapefruit league?
Think his arm will last till september?
;^)
|
88.16 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | UNC-ExcellentLossInWaiting | Mon Mar 22 1993 16:03 | 4 |
| MikeC, since Roger picked up that "Buns Of Steel" video he's
been looking mighty impressive.
/Don
|
88.17 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Mar 22 1993 16:06 | 3 |
| Didn't Clemens give up 5 hits and 4 runs yesterday??
The Crazy Met
|
88.18 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | Pens go fer #3 in '93! | Mon Mar 22 1993 16:15 | 7 |
| I heerd he bought the Cindy Crawford workout tape and now his right arm
looks like Schwarzenegger's!!!
(8^)*
JaKe
|
88.19 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Mar 22 1993 16:24 | 8 |
| Rog didn't look too impressive yesterday. He was missing the strike
zone high. He had a bad first inning (walked 2 - one of which forced
in a run, and hit a batter - boy was Sax POed after getting dusted)
giving up 3 runs. He was outta there after 4 having thrown a lot of
pitches -- I don't think he gave up any runs after the 1st inning,
though. I don't worry too much about his spring training outings. He
does things like run 5 miles right before game time and then does
windsprints between innings purposely making himself fatigued.
|
88.20 | | GRANPA::DFAUST | With every wish,there comes a curse | Mon Mar 22 1993 17:53 | 4 |
| Are the Red Sox at home on May 5 and how easy is it to get tickets?
Dennis Faust
|
88.21 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Mar 23 1993 11:04 | 5 |
| Dennis, the Sox are home against Oakland on May 5. Game time is 7:35
pm. You shouldn't have too much of a problem getting tickets since it
is a weeknight game. I doubt you'll get box seats, but there are alot
of good seats in the bleachers. Give the box office a call at
(617)267-1770.
|
88.22 | | CTHQ::LEARY | UNC:AnomalyOnHorizon;CHAMPEENSHIP | Thu Apr 01 1993 13:16 | 33 |
| Excerpt from a leter received at Fenway and faxed to Ft Myers;
RE: Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd
Dear Mr. Gorman
This firm has been retained by Dennis Boyd to seek legal relief
from his exclusion from baseball despite substantial evidence of his
ability to pitch effectively at the major league level.
------
I don't know what's sadder; Can going through with this riciculous
charade or his self delusion that he is of "major league caliber"
Have other teams received this letter besides the Red Sox?
Even has an ironic twist.... the law firm Can retained is from
Cleveland ( of which Can's immortal words will live in infamy) and
the letter was sent to "YANKEY" Way (da Bambino curse agin!).
What else can our HomeTown Team get hit over the haid with?
This is about as asinine,IMO, as Matt Young claiming the Bosox never
gave him a chance and Clemens coming to his defense, and Jack the
Whiffer saying the media made him broke.
Talk about cursed.
MikeL
|
88.24 | As the march towards Cooperstown continues... | TOOK::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Apr 05 1993 18:54 | 7 |
|
Roger Clemens recorded another meaningless early-season victory over
Kevin Appier and the KC Royals today by the score of 3-1, running his
lifetime record to 153-72, .680 (2nd best winning pct. of all time).
glenn
|
88.25 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Tue Apr 06 1993 09:35 | 20 |
| > Roger Clemens recorded another meaningless early-season victory over
> Kevin Appier and the KC Royals today by the score of 3-1, running his
> lifetime record to 153-72, .680 (2nd best winning pct. of all time).
I caught from the 6th-8th inning on my home yesterday. Roger seemed to
be pitching really, really well.
The Red Sox seemed to be playing pretty well also, although I was a bit
concerned about them late in the game. They had opportunities to score
more runs (bases loaded at one point, two men on at another) with poor
KC pitching on the mound (Appier at one point, his reliever at another).
In both cases, the Sox failed to get a man in. Not a good omen.
Is Viola pitching today?
'Saw
|
88.26 | | FDCV06::KING | OH NO!!!! I'm a bubba!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | Tue Apr 06 1993 09:56 | 3 |
| Sox are off today... Viola goes tomorrow against Cone..
REK
|
88.27 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Tue Apr 06 1993 10:06 | 9 |
| > Sox are off today... Viola goes tomorrow against Cone..
>
> REK
Thanks REK. After I entered the note I wondered if they might have a break
today after their strenuous outing yesterday 8^)
'Saw
|
88.28 | Open Date on Purpose! | CUPMK::SCOPA | | Tue Apr 06 1993 11:07 | 8 |
| All teams schedule open dates after home openers....gotta keep those
lucky fans with the opener tickets happy.
If it rains on opening day those fans can still use their tickets on
the following day. It's the only time all year when you know what your
raindate will be even before it rains.
Maj
|
88.29 | Rocket on Patriots day.. | SNAX::ERICKSON | The snow has melted, time to tee off! | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:03 | 5 |
|
Looking at the schedule, it looks like Frankie V. will pitch the
home opener and Rocket will pitch on Patriots Day.
/Ron
|
88.30 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:07 | 11 |
|
> Looking at the schedule, it looks like Frankie V. will pitch the
> home opener and Rocket will pitch on Patriots Day.
I'd love that, but I don't think we'll get so lucky. Roger would have
to pitch on 3 days' rest somewhere for that to happen (looks like this
Sat- next Thurs- following Tues, or later, if they decide to stay in
rotation).
glenn
|
88.31 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Sounds like.. when doves cry | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:40 | 4 |
| Assuming they play tomorrow night. Weather doesn't look good in KC.
-Walt (who is SUPPOSED to be going)...
|
88.32 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | FreddyBrown,BillBuckner,ChrisWebber | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:41 | 4 |
| What a team! What a defense! What a pitching staff! What
a bullpen!
/Don
|
88.33 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | The Peter Principle in action | Tue Apr 06 1993 13:29 | 2 |
|
The magic number is 161!
|
88.34 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Apr 06 1993 13:31 | 2 |
| Glenn, is Butch still planning on going with the 4 man rotation to
start the year to give Darwin time to get healthy?
|
88.35 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Apr 06 1993 14:08 | 10 |
|
> Glenn, is Butch still planning on going with the 4 man rotation to
> start the year to give Darwin time to get healthy?
Not that I've heard. Darwin has declared himself healthy and was
pitching in his turn late in spring training. They won't need the 5th
starter much in April anyway (and I would hope that's Hesketh).
glenn
|
88.36 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Tue Apr 06 1993 14:28 | 6 |
| Haven't seen my paper yet today.
Did Rog get the complete game? If not, who closed for him?
'Saw
|
88.37 | | FDCV06::KING | OH NO!!!! I'm a bubba!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | Tue Apr 06 1993 14:33 | 3 |
| Rog went 8 and RUSSELL did a 4 pitch ninth for the save..
REK
|
88.38 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Tue Apr 06 1993 14:51 | 7 |
| Thanks.
I know the guy on the radio (Ken Coleman?) said that Butch wouldn't use
Russell before the 9th......
'Saw
|
88.39 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Apr 06 1993 16:09 | 6 |
| �I know the guy on the radio (Ken Coleman?) said that Butch wouldn't use
�Russell before the 9th......
Russell claims that Valentine caused all his blown saves last year by
bringing him at the wrong time. I'm sure Butch learned a few things
after watching Reardon blow several last season as well.
|
88.40 | | CTHQ::LEARY | UNC:AnomalyOnHorizon;CHAMPEENSHIP | Tue Apr 06 1993 16:12 | 6 |
| Yea,
Butchie larned the hard way that ol' Jeff had lost da Cheese......
and so did Bobby Cox...
MikeL
|
88.41 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Apr 06 1993 16:26 | 15 |
|
> Russell claims that Valentine caused all his blown saves last year by
> bringing him at the wrong time. I'm sure Butch learned a few things
> after watching Reardon blow several last season as well.
There's actually a perverse truth to this (Russell did have tough save
opportunities-- Reardon didn't), but only to those who live and die by
the near-completely-bogus save stat, and its counterpart, the blown save.
Can you picture Rollie Fingers blaming Dick Williams for "causing" a
blown save by bringing him into a tough game situation? This used to
be what relief pitchers were for; now they want to be optimized around
such trouble spots...
glenn
|
88.42 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | FreddyBrown,BillBuckner,ChrisWebber | Tue Apr 06 1993 16:29 | 5 |
| HaHa! Absolutely Glenn. If they used/babied Fingers the way
they do today's relievers, he would have a save record that would
be as unapproachable as Dimaggio's 56 game hitting streak.
/Don
|
88.43 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Tue Apr 06 1993 16:36 | 43 |
| > There's actually a perverse truth to this (Russell did have tough save
> opportunities-- Reardon didn't), but only to those who live and die by
> the near-completely-bogus save stat, and its counterpart, the blown save.
> Can you picture Rollie Fingers blaming Dick Williams for "causing" a
> blown save by bringing him into a tough game situation? This used to
> be what relief pitchers were for; now they want to be optimized around
> such trouble spots...
Good points, Glenn.
It used to be in baseball that they had no relief pitchers. The starters
were manly men, who threw into the late innings, and dug down inside and
somehow found the stamina to go on, even though their arms were like
spaghetti.
Then along came the relief pitcher, perhaps one of the sexiest positions
baseball has ever seen. Late innings, tight game, men on base, opponent's
best hitter coming to the plate. Out to the mounds strolls the manager,
taking his time to let his ace fireman have a couple more pitches.
Purposefully he taps his left forearm. He wants the southpaw.
The ace comes in. He'll fall into one of two categories: the pitcher
who'll tear you down head on with heat, or the pitcher who'll get it
by you with guile.
The manager has chosen the southpaw who throws heat. He throws his
ten warmup pitches, and the proceeds to mow down the opponent's best
hitter with three pitches -- all fast balls, all right down Broadway,
all saying "Hit me if you think you're man enough".
Yes, perhaps those days are going the way of the iron-man starter.
Perhaps today's relief pitchers are more concerned with stats than they
are the reputation of being a heat-throwing, studmaster closer, or
the reputation of being the crafty, studious pitcher who makes the ball
jump and twitch, and tantalizing taunt a hitter into swinging and missing.
Perhaps we've seen the last of the Rollie Fingers, the Goose Gossages
and others of their like.....
'Saw
|
88.44 | Dennis Eckersley is the Anti-Christ! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Apr 06 1993 16:39 | 1 |
|
|
88.45 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Fri Apr 16 1993 09:22 | 13 |
| GREAT game last night.
I caught it from the 9th inning on, and boy, those Red Sox never gave up.
Even when they were down a run in the 13th, they never quit, whereas last
year I'd have thought that they were toast.
Nice way to win it last night.
btw, hopefully, that was the extra inning game that WON'T fall on Pats day....
'Saw
|
88.46 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Apr 16 1993 11:21 | 10 |
|
> btw, hopefully, that was the extra inning game that WON'T fall on Pats day....
I'd take a game like that, anytime. Sure, it came in at 3:45, but
that's about the average time for your usual Fenway 9-7 affair anyway.
So far, they are exciting...
glenn
|
88.47 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Fri Apr 16 1993 12:24 | 10 |
| > I'd take a game like that, anytime. Sure, it came in at 3:45, but
> that's about the average time for your usual Fenway 9-7 affair anyway.
>
> So far, they are exciting...
Agreed, but I've had my fill of extra innings on Pats Day 8^)
'Saw
|
88.48 | to speed up da game! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabee | Fri Apr 16 1993 12:32 | 14 |
|
Yabbut yesterday (where else?) on the radion, I heard that the BoSox,
in an attempt to speed up da games have implemented a time limit
of 2 minutes between halves in an inning.
Dere's a ball boy sitting near 3rd base with a stopwatch and da
announcer's supposed to say when there's 30 seconds to go.
snort snot sschlepps!
I remain,
wondering if it's a mechanical or 'lectric stopwatch?
Kev
|
88.49 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Fri Apr 16 1993 12:50 | 18 |
| > Yabbut yesterday (where else?) on the radion, I heard that the BoSox,
> in an attempt to speed up da games have implemented a time limit
> of 2 minutes between halves in an inning.
I thought that the league had cut the time between innings down from
2 minutes to 1:45, or even 1:30....
> Dere's a ball boy sitting near 3rd base with a stopwatch and da
> announcer's supposed to say when there's 30 seconds to go.
What I had heard was the the announcer was supposed to announce the first
batter when the limit is up, whether or not the batter is in the box.
'Saw
|
88.50 | Fool's Gold! | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | ComeToMiami-AndGiveUsYourMoney! | Fri Apr 16 1993 13:41 | 1 |
|
|
88.51 | Viola for the Cy | CNTROL::CHILDS | U think u're something special? Think Again! | Fri Apr 16 1993 13:58 | 13 |
| <<< Note 88.50 by AXIS::ROBICHAUD "ComeToMiami-AndGiveUsYourMoney!" >>>
-< Fool's Gold! >-
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
that's one man's opinion, however
wrong it may be!!!!!
;^)
Soxs are cinch for the penant without "one way Wade"....
mike
|
88.52 | | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabee | Fri Apr 16 1993 14:22 | 22 |
|
Yabbut
ARISE!!!
AWAKEN!!!!!
T'is time to bring forth that time honored and favorite topic,
responsible for billions and billions of undirected electrons to
reach their fulfillment and be cast into the role of the permanent
record of everybody's favorite Bazeball topic:
Roger's ERA is 1.5
;^)
I remain,
curious, izzat any good?
Kev
|
88.53 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Apr 16 1993 16:35 | 5 |
| > So far, they are exciting...
Yeah, and they're getting booed for being exciting. I can't believe
that the fans booed when the Indians sniffed out the squeeze attempt.
The Sox went for the W with a gutsy call.
|
88.54 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Apr 16 1993 16:53 | 4 |
| �Soxs are cinch for the penant without "one way Wade"....
Mike, stick to Big East hoops. The Sox won 2 pennants with Wade and
were 1 strike away from a World Championship with him.
|
88.55 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | ComeToMiami-AndGiveUsYourMoney! | Fri Apr 16 1993 16:56 | 1 |
| Only one pennant BigMac. The Sox only win one per decade.
|
88.56 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Apr 16 1993 17:05 | 1 |
| Oh yeah. That was 2 AL East titles, not 2 pennants.
|
88.57 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | Paying for decades of Demo.Congress | Fri Apr 16 1993 17:08 | 3 |
| > Oh yeah. That was 2 AL East titles, not 2 pennants.
Actually, it was 3 AL East Titles, 1 AL Pennant, 0 WS rings.
|
88.58 | That was ridiculous | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Apr 16 1993 17:23 | 17 |
|
> Yeah, and they're getting booed for being exciting. I can't believe
> that the fans booed when the Indians sniffed out the squeeze attempt.
> The Sox went for the W with a gutsy call.
Yes, it just goes to show that when it comes to baseball knowledge and
strategy, even at hallowed Fenway, ignorant kneejerk second-guessers
abound. The squeeze is not a bad call there, with one out. The tough
decision came a batter earlier, when Butch sacrificed Riles to third
even though the top of his order was up in the person of a good bat
control man in Scott Fletcher. The fly ball sacrifice is not an
automatic, easy thing to do, and you're only giving yourself one shot
at it. But I didn't hear anyone booing that call. The fans were
waiting for something "bad" to happen, per usual...
glenn
|
88.59 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Be there when I feed the tree... | Fri Apr 16 1993 17:31 | 5 |
| You don't call for a suicide squeeze when you're behind in the count,
because the team can pitch out. Normally you wait until it's 1-0 or
2-0 in the count and the ball has to been within 20 feet of the
plate...
|
88.60 | is this better? | CNTROL::CHILDS | U think u're something special? Think Again! | Fri Apr 16 1993 17:44 | 5 |
|
fine Mac, have it you're way the Soxs are cinch to win the World Series this
year without "one way Wade".....
mike
|
88.61 | More complex than that when the run's the game-winner | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Apr 16 1993 18:09 | 18 |
|
> You don't call for a suicide squeeze when you're behind in the count,
> because the team can pitch out. Normally you wait until it's 1-0 or
> 2-0 in the count and the ball has to been within 20 feet of the
> plate...
Yeah, I made the comment in RED_SOX that putting the play on on the
first pitch might have been preferable, but 0-1 isn't an automatic
pitchout. With first and second open and the game on the line the
count doesn't mean anything, and you can pitch out to your heart's
delight (putting a man on first actually helps, if you luck into a
perfect DP ball). It's just a risk, at almost any time. The main
thing is not getting caught in a predictable count selection for
running plays.
glenn
|
88.62 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | ABP | Fri Apr 16 1993 18:20 | 5 |
| Nah Kev the discussion to start is which day the Red Sox will clinch
the division.
The Crazy Met
|
88.63 | 9-3!! Parade in...? | CTHQ::LEARY | UNC:AnomalyOnHorizon;CHAMPEENSHIP | Sun Apr 18 1993 21:40 | 1 |
|
|
88.64 | off to best start since 1978 | FRETZ::HEISER | Spam & Eggs, Spam, Spam | Mon Apr 19 1993 13:42 | 3 |
| My, my, my, what's gotten into the BoSox? Or is it that Wade is gone?
;-) I was looking forward to watching them on Saturday, but CBS
thought our area would rather see the Ruds and the Muts.
|
88.65 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | ComeToMiami-AndGiveUsYourMoney! | Mon Apr 19 1993 22:03 | 6 |
| Hope y'all had a good time after the game. I'm still at work.
8^(
/Don
P.S. This is the year!
|
88.66 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | Twas a BIG Texas Barbecue | Mon Apr 19 1993 22:13 | 8 |
|
>> P.S. This is the year!
They been saying that up there since the Babe left, ain't they
Slasher???
JaKe
|
88.67 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | ComeToMiami-AndGiveUsYourMoney! | Mon Apr 19 1993 22:33 | 3 |
| Yeah JaKe, but this time their for real! [Again]
/Don
|
88.68 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | Twas a BIG Texas Barbecue | Mon Apr 19 1993 22:39 | 6 |
| Slasher, sounds like a broken reco(clunk)broken reco(clunk)broken
reco(clunk)broken reco(clunk)broken reco(clunk)broken reco(clunk)etc.
etc. to me.
JaKe
|
88.69 | | PLUGH::NEEDLE | Money talks. Mine says "Good-Bye!" | Mon Apr 19 1993 23:09 | 7 |
| Hope y'all had a good time at the game. I celebrated my day off by working 16
hours. Billl, hope you had a few beers for me - obligation of using my tix!
I got up at 6:00 this morning and the car started automatically heading for
the rat. Oh well.
j.
|
88.70 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Will u b there when I feed the tree... | Mon Apr 19 1993 23:55 | 3 |
| Bill had a few....
-Walt (just got home a short time ago...)
|
88.71 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Tue Apr 20 1993 09:46 | 26 |
| There's got to be some whacky stuff going on.
Hesketh manages 8 shutout innings on Saturday. Viola pitches the first
shutout by a southpaw (yea!) in 6 years, and Dopson pitches a 3 hit,
complete game shutout on Patriots Day.....
I have a decision to make. This is kind of like a girl I used to date
in High School. I went with her for a while, she dumped me, then we
got back together again, and broke up again, and, in the immortal words
of that blues legened B.B. King, "there is always one more time", we
went for three. Ended the same way.
Now the Red Sox are teasing me again. Starting 10-3, their best start
in 41 years. As I said to Glenn yesterday, "It sure would be nice to
be sitting in the OPP in November recalling our conversation on Patriots
Day, and finally feeling that satisfaction".
So, do I HOPE that this is the season, and really get into it, only to
be dumped by the inevitable August el-foldo? Or do I sit back, kind
of quasi-interested, and then when they win it all, kick myself for not
taking more of an interest?
I'm a sucker for a pretty girl, and a sucker for the Sox, I guess.....
'Saw
|
88.72 | True bluesmen can appreciate the Sox, both their ups and downs | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Apr 20 1993 10:57 | 7 |
|
You *always* have to give that girl another chance, maybe even if
she ain't so pretty. Otherwise you just end up forever lonely and
miserable, like a Cleveland Indians' fan...
glenn
|
88.73 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Tue Apr 20 1993 10:59 | 20 |
| > -< True bluesmen can appreciate the Sox, both their ups and downs >-
>
>
> You *always* have to give that girl another chance, maybe even if
> she ain't so pretty. Otherwise you just end up forever lonely and
> miserable, like a Cleveland Indians' fan...
Amen.
What the hell, she cain't hurt me as bad as she did in 1986. When
she dumped me in 1967, I was a little too young to realize it. 1975 was
a bummer, but I recovered. In 1986, she was a nasty girl -- she had to
hurt the Chainsaw when she dumped him.....
Yep, "there's always one more time....."
'Saw
|
88.74 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Will u b there when I feed the tree... | Tue Apr 20 1993 11:17 | 6 |
| "These boots were made for walkin',
and that's just what they'll do...
One of these days these boots
are gonna walk all over you..."
-Nancy Sinatra
|
88.75 | | METSNY::francus | ABP | Tue Apr 20 1993 11:40 | 5 |
| re :.74
Hey isn't that what the FBIkept playing down in Waco, Texas??
The Crazy Met
|
88.76 | | CAMONE::WAY | Don't start me to talkin' | Tue Apr 20 1993 12:10 | 7 |
| >Hey isn't that what the FBIkept playing down in Waco, Texas??
Except that they dubbed in M1A1 Abrams instead of "boots".....
hth,
'Saw
|
88.77 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Will u b there when I feed the tree... | Tue Apr 20 1993 15:26 | 2 |
| Yup... and they played it at Fenway yesterday... coincedence?
|
88.78 | | GENRAL::WADE | yippy-I-yo-mama! | Tue Apr 20 1993 17:44 | 6 |
|
'Saw,
What's that they say about paybacks? :*)
Claybroon
|
88.79 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | ABP | Fri Apr 23 1993 01:35 | 12 |
| Chris Bosio pitched a no-hitter against the Red Sox tonight; score
was 7-0. Bosio retired the last 26 hitters - not sure what the first
one did. Vasquez made a bare handed pick up to get the last out of the
game.
Once again ESPN comes through with flying colors. They showed the 9th
inning live - it was the NESN feed. No other network can come close to
do these kind of things. I hope they keep showing baseball when the new
TV contract is finalized.
The Crazy Met
|
88.80 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Apr 23 1993 10:37 | 17 |
|
> Chris Bosio pitched a no-hitter against the Red Sox tonight; score
> was 7-0. Bosio retired the last 26 hitters - not sure what the first
> one did. Vasquez made a bare handed pick up to get the last out of the
> game.
That's Vizquel, who made a number of nice if not spectacular plays on
the night. Bosio walked the first two batters, Riles and Quintana,
then Greenwell hit into a DP and the next 25 men went down in order.
Very impressive.
I had the game on the radio, fell asleep, woke up in the bottom of the
8th and immediately turned on ESPN. There it was, as expected. They
do a nice job.
glenn
|
88.81 | | FDCV07::KING | Jessinator attacks Disney, film @11 | Fri Apr 23 1993 10:43 | 4 |
| First 2 batters walk, Grennwell hits into a DP and Bosio gets real
lucky...
REK
|
88.82 | | METSNY::francus | ABP | Fri Apr 23 1993 11:03 | 7 |
|
re: .81
Not sure I have ever seen a no-hitter that did not have an element of
luck in it.
The Crazy Met
|
88.83 | | FDCV07::KING | Jessinator attacks Disney, film @11 | Fri Apr 23 1993 11:23 | 5 |
| I should have added a :-}....
Sorry TCC....
REK
|
88.84 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | ComeToMiami-AndGiveUsYourMoney! | Fri Apr 23 1993 12:40 | 8 |
| After watching the Broons� lose in overtime and Montr�al win
in overtime I switched on NESN and saw the Sox were getting clobbered,
but noticed that Bosio was pitching a nohitter. I decided to stay
up until the Sox got a hit, so I saw the whole thing from the 5th
inning on. NESN had Bosio on for an interview immediately after
the game, so I assume that Seattle didn't televise the game.
/Don
|
88.85 | | DECWET::METZGER | Imagine your logo here. | Fri Apr 23 1993 15:32 | 10 |
|
No cable contract for the M's yet. Local Channel 11 shows some games but not
that one. A couple of guys here were at the game. I had an invite but declined
due to a desperate need for sleep. I'm glad ESPN showed the last inning at
least so I could watch it on the tube...
It's amazing the things you come across flipping through the channels during
commercials. Unfortunately it caused me to miss most of Cheers.
Metz
|
88.86 | | METSNY::francus | ABP | Fri Apr 23 1993 16:21 | 7 |
| Cheers? That was long over on the East Coast by the time the 9th inning
began :-)
Metz, if you're really nice I have last nights Cheers episode on
tape and I could send it out to you.
The Crazy Met
|
88.87 | Pena, Riles, Calderon, etc... pathetic... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Apr 26 1993 11:07 | 13 |
|
The real Red Sox have shown up in place of those impostors that came up
from Florida for the first couple weeks of the year. I don't mind the
current five-game losing streak so much, because the Sox are still a
respectable 11-8, but it's the obvious lack of offense that *will*
continue to plague this team that's disturbing (message to Lou Gorman:
send HELP!). These guys couldn't hit their way out of a wet paper sack
even if Mo Vaughn were to rip a huge hole in it first. You just hate
to see such a historical rarity as great Red Sox pitching being wasted
again, as it has been since about 1990, really...
glenn
|
88.88 | | CAMONE::WAY | I'd have had to miss the dance | Mon Apr 26 1993 11:12 | 23 |
| > The real Red Sox have shown up in place of those impostors that came up
> from Florida for the first couple weeks of the year. I don't mind the
> current five-game losing streak so much, because the Sox are still a
> respectable 11-8, but it's the obvious lack of offense that *will*
> continue to plague this team that's disturbing (message to Lou Gorman:
> send HELP!). These guys couldn't hit their way out of a wet paper sack
> even if Mo Vaughn were to rip a huge hole in it first. You just hate
> to see such a historical rarity as great Red Sox pitching being wasted
> again, as it has been since about 1990, really...
Yes. I can't believe that they couldn't hit the junk that Sanderson
was throwing last night.
With a GOLDEN opportunity to blow it wide open in the 7th, Quintana
couldn't put a flyball deep enough to score Dawson. And then the
stiff SS who came to the plate looked pathetic.
Ugh......
'Saw
|
88.89 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is crawling!!! | Mon Apr 26 1993 11:15 | 2 |
| Yes, that loud "thud" that was heard on the West Coast this weekend was not an
earthquake, but the Boston Red Sox falling to earth...
|
88.90 | I thought defense wins championships | FRETZ::HEISER | break this ball and chain | Mon Apr 26 1993 13:30 | 1 |
|
|
88.91 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Apr 27 1993 12:20 | 5 |
| Journeyman pitcher Scott Sanderson is now 8-3 lifetime against the Sox.
It shoulda been 7-4. The Sox wuz robbed on that call at the plate in
the 9th. How could the ump possibly be thinking of making an out call
on a throw the catcher had to leap to get?
|
88.92 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | The Peter Principle in action | Tue Apr 27 1993 12:27 | 9 |
|
>> It shoulda been 7-4. The Sox wuz robbed on that call at the plate in
>> the 9th. How could the ump possibly be thinking of making an out call
>> on a throw the catcher had to leap to get?
And what about Butch Hobson's ho-hum reaction to the call? Most
managers are out there screaming over even marginal calls but ole
Butch doesn't even bat an eye over an obviously botched call. Cheez
n' crackers, Butch, show a little life.
|
88.93 | Wahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | MR INFORMER..LICKY LICKY BOOM BOOM DOWN | Tue Apr 27 1993 12:38 | 7 |
|
Hey the ball was there first.... :-)
Chappy
|
88.94 | | METSNY::francus | ABP | Tue Apr 27 1993 13:02 | 8 |
|
Mac please help me follow your logic.
Sanderson was 7-3 against the Red Sox before Sunday's game. If the Sox
get the call in the 9th then the game is tied 2-2. How does a tie translate
into a Sanderson loss??
The Crazy Met
|
88.95 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 28 1993 14:48 | 6 |
| �Sanderson was 7-3 against the Red Sox before Sunday's game. If the Sox
�get the call in the 9th then the game is tied 2-2. How does a tie translate
�into a Sanderson loss??
Game is tied at 2 with one out and two on. I'll leave the rest as an
excercise for the reader.
|
88.96 | | CAMONE::WAY | I'd have had to miss the dance | Wed Apr 28 1993 14:51 | 10 |
| > Game is tied at 2 with one out and two on. I'll leave the rest as an
> excercise for the reader.
Next batter gets up, grounds to second for the inning ending double play.
Next inning, California cranks one out to win it 3-2.....
Any questions?
|
88.97 | "ND" all the way around | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Apr 28 1993 14:53 | 7 |
|
Still doesn't fly Mac, since Sanderson left after the 7th inning...
;-)
glenn
|
88.98 | | METSNY::francus | ABP | Wed Apr 28 1993 15:24 | 3 |
| heh heh
The Crazy Met
|
88.99 | MO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | CTHQ::LEARY | I don't do ND spandex | Wed Apr 28 1993 22:54 | 1 |
|
|
88.100 | | CAMONE::WAY | on a magic carpet ride... | Thu Apr 29 1993 09:40 | 3 |
| MO Better!
|
88.101 | | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabee | Thu Apr 29 1993 10:08 | 2 |
| Less Filling
|
88.102 | Mo better get some teammates! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Apr 29 1993 10:21 | 1 |
|
|
88.103 | -1, HAHAHA Rat on | CTHQ::LEARY | I don't do ND spandex | Thu Apr 29 1993 10:44 | 1 |
|
|
88.104 | At least this one baseball player is tough... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 03 1993 10:55 | 10 |
|
Roger Clemens is still the best sports bargain in town, and has been at
least since injuries began to take their toll on Larry Bird. The man
is an absolute horse. Saturdaay, with 110 pitches already under his
belt, he comes out for one more inning and strikes out the side. That
brought on a standing ovation from my normally reserved and pensive
self... ;-)
glenn
|
88.105 | | CAM3::WAY | Are you Master of your domain? | Mon May 03 1993 11:02 | 19 |
| > Roger Clemens is still the best sports bargain in town, and has been at
> least since injuries began to take their toll on Larry Bird. The man
> is an absolute horse. Saturdaay, with 110 pitches already under his
> belt, he comes out for one more inning and strikes out the side. That
> brought on a standing ovation from my normally reserved and pensive
> self... ;-)
Roger did a FINE job on Saturday. The Sox did a fine job this weekend
too.
One thing I've noticed is that there is a lot more EFFORT going on
out there. Zupcik had the nice catch in LF, and Vaughn down full out
for that line drive.
Good stuff!
'Saw
|
88.107 | betwen R12 ans S11... | CNTROL::CHILDS | The idea that nothing matters... | Mon May 03 1993 13:35 | 9 |
|
> If I could find your new office Mike, I woulda left the usual 'Clemens
> is God' message on your board...
Why just look for my REK, official Roger Clemens' fan picture on
the cabinet where it's always been...
;^)
|
88.108 | | CAMONE::WAY | Are you Master of your domain? | Mon May 03 1993 14:33 | 14 |
| Last week I picked up part of my dad's Father's Day present. It's this
really cool book called "Seasons of the Kid", about Ted Williams.
It has some dynamite pictures, ranging from baseball, to advertisements
he did, and it chronicles his career. I took some time to look through
it, before stashing it away until June, and it was well worth the purchase
price.
If you see it, and if you're a Sox fan who liked The Splendid Splinter,
by all means, pick it up.
'Saw
|
88.109 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Tue May 04 1993 07:52 | 5 |
| Re .104
But Glen, it wasn't a BIG game. :*)
Lee
|
88.110 | Even Mark Maquire tagged him...hahhaaa | CNTROL::CHILDS | The idea that nothing matters... | Fri May 07 1993 11:22 | 13 |
|
No message from Karen... ;^(
No standing O from Glenn?
What's happening here.....So, I'm reading Billy Ballou's columun this
morning and he's going on and on about how this only happens a couple
of times a year and he's only human and finally about the 6th paragraph
or so he mention the sore elbow the tendionitis, etc....
was is the "horse" always breaking down when he looses????
mike
|
88.111 | Not pretty | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 07 1993 12:11 | 17 |
|
> No standing O from Glenn?
Gimme time, wouldya? I played hookie yesterday and was there to pay
homage, and yes, Roger spit the bit. Up 3-0 and blows the lead, and
you can count on one hand the number of times that's happened. Wasn't
worth the vacation day...
Look for Roger to rebound and to continue to deliver nothing but
pitching excellence, but to lose an unusual number of games as the Red
Sox' lineup begins to resemble that of the Quad City River Bandits...
The sore elbow is a non-issue; Clemens made note of it when he was
shutting down the league but said it wasn't a factor yesterday.
glenn
|
88.112 | RC = V-day? for some I can see it, not for me though | CNTROL::CHILDS | The idea that nothing matters... | Fri May 07 1993 14:38 | 12 |
|
>> The sore elbow is a non-issue; Clemens made note of it when he was
>> shutting down the league but said it wasn't a factor yesterday.
maybe the statement made during the shutting down period was made in
anticipation of yesterday? I'm sure he's wouldn't be feining an injury
during a hot spell to add a few more stiches to his mantle such as
his "airness'" ankle the other night?
;^)
|
88.113 | | CTHQ::LEARY | I don't do ND spandex | Wed May 12 1993 11:00 | 17 |
|
Yo Childsey,
How's about that Rocket, huh? 97 MPH cheese and 13 Bird K's! Agin a
team that could capture the AlEast gonfalon. But wait, how silly
of me... tis a meaningless game....
BTW,
Nice to see the PawSox stocking up with more ready for prime time
players. Franklin Stubbs, Steve Lyons, Herb Wiiningham. Have they
tendered contracts to Fergie Jenkins, Bill Lee, or Bob Stanley yet?
Purty soon they'll be able to whip the Olde Towne Team.. admittedly
not a great feat.
Man, the organiozation's young oplayers must be thrilled with this
trend.
MikeL
|
88.114 | did they forget to call him the "greatest" or somethin' | CNTROL::CHILDS | The idea that nothing matters... | Wed May 12 1993 12:19 | 13 |
|
> Yo Childsey,
> How's about that Rocket, huh? 97 MPH cheese and 13 Bird K's! Agin a
> team that could capture the AlEast gonfalon. But wait, how silly
> of me... tis a meaningless game....
couldn't have been much of a game MikeL., Glenn has yet to give standing
O or KBD hasn't left me a message....
What's his "Highness" beef with the Hearald???????
mike
|
88.115 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | ESPengoon�N | Wed May 12 1993 13:05 | 14 |
| RE: Clemens
First it wasn't a big game and second since he follows the fifth
pitcher on the staff that "record after a Red Sox loss" is bogus.
To say anything else is ::SPROTS political incorrectness.
RE: PawSox
MikeL, I've been to a couple of PawSox games (much more enjoyable
than Fenway) and they've got a couple of kids who impressed me.
One is thirdbaseman Luis Ortiz and the other is the catcher who's
big, tough and is batting over .300 (his name escapes me).
/Don
|
88.116 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 12 1993 13:07 | 19 |
|
> couldn't have been much of a game MikeL., Glenn has yet to give standing
> O or KBD hasn't left me a message....
You're right, Mike. Run of the mill at this point, as only early
retirement/injury and inept teammates might stand in the way of the
"greatest ever" tag. Inefficiency with number of pitches used cost
Roger the one-hitter last night. I'd rate it only a 7.5 on the
Rog-o-meter. I've seen better.
> What's his "Highness" beef with the Hearald???????
Probably still with that lowlife scum George Kimball. Although just
about all the Boston baseball writers have their heads firmly
entrenched these days. Either Lou's brainwashed every one of 'em, or
they're afraid their Fenway buffet privileges might get taken away.
glenn
|
88.117 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 12 1993 13:21 | 21 |
|
> First it wasn't a big game and second since he follows the fifth
> pitcher on the staff that "record after a Red Sox loss" is bogus.
> To say anything else is ::SPROTS political incorrectness.
Huh? That might give Clemens more opportunities after a loss but it
shouldn't affect his percentage (which is much higher than his pct.
overall--not that that's such a big deal as it's made out to be).
> MikeL, I've been to a couple of PawSox games (much more enjoyable
> than Fenway) and they've got a couple of kids who impressed me.
> One is thirdbaseman Luis Ortiz and the other is the catcher who's
> big, tough and is batting over .300 (his name escapes me).
Ortiz can hit but supposedly can't field. Bring him up, make him the
DH, plop him in the OF; the Sox need the help. I think the starting
catcher is John Flaherty, who was up last year and has never hit
before, especially for power...
glenn
|
88.118 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Silicon chip inside her head ->overload | Wed May 12 1993 14:22 | 5 |
| >Probably still with that lowlife scum George Kimball. Although just
I heard they were making a movie based on "The Fugative (sp?)" Maybe
he wants a cut on movie rights...
|
88.119 | | 3335::francus | ABP | Wed May 12 1993 15:26 | 10 |
|
/er is the world coming to an end?? Since when did
you give a bleepity bleep about political
correctness, other than to always be incorrect?
Please confirm that you left your terminal ans
someone else posted that note.
:-)
The Crazy Met
|
88.120 | The reply was tongue in cheek Craze. I'm still cantankerous. | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | ESPengoon�N | Wed May 12 1993 18:20 | 1 |
|
|
88.121 | Once again, kudos, Roger! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 13 1993 12:04 | 24 |
|
The flap with Roger and the Herald has to do with him finally taking
exception to their regular feature "The World According to Roger",
where they lift a grammatically incorrect quote verbatim from his
interviews in order to make him sound uneducated and stupid. Such a
tactic used to be fairly common in the reporting of quotes taken from
Latin and black athletes, but was rightly judged to be demeaning and
undignified (not to mention outright misleading). So Roger has said he
won't talk to the Herald reporters who are supplying the quotes. Since
sportswriters consider access to athletes their constitutional right
even though they'll abuse the (voluntary) source in whatever way they
feel fit, expect that scaly-backed reptile Bob Sales down at the Herald
editing desk to start up with some entire irrelevant screeching about
freedom of the press, journalistic integrity, etc., etc., just as he
did with the infamous George Kimball affair. All with a straight face,
of course.
This feature of the Herald's is *exactly* what I was talking about when
I said that many Bostonians have been unable to come to terms with
where Roger Clemens comes from and who he is (read: that big dumb
ungrateful Texan).
glenn
|
88.122 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | The Peter Principle in action | Thu May 13 1993 12:09 | 9 |
|
>> This feature of the Herald's is *exactly* what I was talking about when
>> I said that many Bostonians have been unable to come to terms with
>> where Roger Clemens comes from and who he is (read: that big dumb
>> ungrateful Texan).
Since when do a few jerks down at the Herald Star with an axe to grind
qualify as "many Bostonians"?
|
88.123 | No, I don't think he's that well liked, seriously | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 13 1993 12:21 | 20 |
|
>> This feature of the Herald's is *exactly* what I was talking about when
>> I said that many Bostonians have been unable to come to terms with
>> where Roger Clemens comes from and who he is (read: that big dumb
>> ungrateful Texan).
> Since when do a few jerks down at the Herald Star with an axe to grind
> qualify as "many Bostonians"?
It's my experience that a lot of people read the Herald (and the Globe;
they have their hatchet men, like Dan Shaughnessy) and take much of
this stuff seriously. Clemens gets more than his share. Usually
there's some "controversy" surrounding Clemens at the beginning of the
season, there are the cries to take him down a peg, he gets booed on
Opening Day, then once the season gets underway his performance speaks
for itself and the critics blend into the background. This season was
actually an exception (so far ;-).
glenn
|
88.124 | Spendin' mah good money on ads | CTHQ::LEARY | I don't do ND spandex | Thu May 13 1993 13:36 | 12 |
| The Herald is a good "library" paper if'n you catch my drift. The
only Herald writers who I enjoy are Joe Guiliotti( BoSox beat main) and
a rare Gerry Callahan( wisearse).
However with the new twist with the "personal" ads on Monday or Tuesday
ala the Phoenix shows what a whore the Herald is.
Ya know I read one the other day...
"M30ishWF seeks Romper Room fun with S/DM on the side. Must not smoke,
root for ND, drink Miller Lite or contribute to SPORTS" Wait till I
get home.
MikeL
|
88.125 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | And there you had it... | Thu May 13 1993 13:43 | 9 |
|
Read about it this morning in the Worcester rag but thanks for the info
anyways Glenn and the concern to answer my original question. I noticed
that the pitching rotation is changing next week so that Roger will get
an extra day off. Funny how the effect of the change is that 2 games
later Roger will pitch a nationally televised contest that he would
have missed. I'm wondering if CBS or Roger demanded this????
mike
|
88.126 | 143 pitches probly demanded it | CTHQ::LEARY | I don't do ND spandex | Thu May 13 1993 13:55 | 1 |
|
|
88.127 | At least the change allows me to worship at the altar again | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 13 1993 14:02 | 20 |
|
> Funny how the effect of the change is that 2 games
> later Roger will pitch a nationally televised contest that he would
> have missed. I'm wondering if CBS or Roger demanded this????
I think it's this Saturday's game that's national, not next Saturday's.
Unless they re-scheduled that game with the Yankees too, and the Sox
are on two weeks in a row. But thanks for always keeping an eye out
for possible conspiratorial goings-on, Mike... ;-)
FWIW, I was critical that the Sox let Roger throw 143 pitches the other
night for the sole purpose of racking up a shutout (a personal stat, no
more, no less). That's an average of 130+ pitches over the past three
starts, which not only is risky to Clemens' health and performance, but
now results in the Sox starting someone from the bullpen on Sunday as
Roger is wisely given the extra day off.
glenn
|
88.128 | Hey, Roger's haircut is all the rage in Appalachia | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue May 18 1993 14:06 | 1 |
|
|
88.129 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | ANTI\Slash | Thu May 20 1993 16:59 | 5 |
| Anybody want to bet that it was that weenie Greenwell's crying to
management that caused the Slobs to pull a very funny Suffolk ad off their
radio stations?
/Don
|
88.130 | Very surprised it lasted this long with the humorless Red Sox | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 20 1993 17:08 | 16 |
|
> Anybody want to bet that it was that weenie Greenwell's crying to
> management that caused the Slobs to pull a very funny Suffolk ad off their
> radio stations?
I dunno; only Wade Boggs was nearly directly targeted, and he's long
gone hard to find. From the first time I heard the ad (which is
hilarious, and is also a surefire indication that Cementhaid Joe will
never again be under the employ of the Boston Red Sox), I couldn't
believe that the Sox were allowing it during their game broadcasts. A
couple of years back, they pulled the same stunt with that commercial
where the guy says to his kid, "I'm a Red Sox fan, son, the excitement
has been bred right out of me." And this was much more critical...
glenn
|
88.131 | | 3335::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu May 20 1993 17:19 | 4 |
|
what was the ad.
The Crazy Met
|
88.132 | | MKFSA::LONG | Better than money in the baaa-a-ank | Thu May 20 1993 17:19 | 5 |
| I haven't heard the ad yunz are referrin' to. Could someone
enlighten me.
billl
|
88.133 | | 3335::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu May 20 1993 17:21 | 3 |
| notes collision
The Crazy Met
|
88.134 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is crawling!!! | Thu May 20 1993 17:26 | 5 |
| re: the ad
It was an ad extolling the virtues of race horses over baseball players.
The punchline was something to the effect of "Race horses don't fool around
with women until AFTER they retire..."
|
88.135 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Burning both ends of the knife... | Thu May 20 1993 18:38 | 3 |
| Yup, that's the one... that and horses don't worry about getting paid
until they win...
|
88.136 | | MKFSA::LONG | Sorry, we're closed! | Fri May 21 1993 09:05 | 6 |
| Who's scheduled to pitch for the Sox Saturday? A good friend
showed up last night with tix in section 30. Sheesh, I must be
living right!
billl
|
88.137 | excuse book example #1 | CNTROL::CHILDS | Clemens caught without his cape AGAIN! | Thu Jun 03 1993 09:41 | 5 |
|
I hear his Highness popped a groin last night? How bad is it? Will he
miss his next start?
mike
|
88.138 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | | Thu Jun 03 1993 09:46 | 10 |
|
>>I hear his Highness popped a groin last night? How bad is it? Will he
>>miss his next start?
There's a new name for this. It's called "Bob Walk Syndrome" after the
Pirate pitcher who makes an average of two or three trips a year to the
DL with groin injuries.
JaKe
|
88.139 | As Bob Cousy would say, fwankwy, I'm wowwied... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 03 1993 10:44 | 1 |
|
|
88.140 | | CAMONE::WAY | Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate | Thu Jun 03 1993 11:32 | 12 |
| You guys laugh about that groin injury an awful lot, but if you
mess up one of those muscles down there between your navel and your
pee-pee, it hurts like a sonofabitch. And it can take a LONG time to
heal properly, and is very prone to re-injury. Every time you think it's
healed, you find out the next time you do something that it's still
messed up....
Anyone know how long the Rocket will be out?
'Saw
|
88.141 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is standing - walking soon!!! | Thu Jun 03 1993 14:40 | 4 |
| re: Da groin pull
How true, how true. It is a reasonably common running injury, and there
is no way to rest it. I once had one that bothered me for a full year.
|
88.142 | "Same ole Story, Same ole Song and Dance" | CNTROL::CHILDS | Clemens caught without his cape AGAIN! | Thu Jun 03 1993 14:47 | 6 |
|
yeah Saw we've all pulled our groins once or twice but it's an invisable
injury. Seems to me that Clem has alot of these invisable injuries after
a bad outing....
mike
|
88.143 | SOX tix anyone | SKEWED::MCKAY | | Thu Jun 03 1993 15:57 | 7 |
| FOR SALE: 4 tix to Sox vs. Baltimore Sunday June 13
Tix are section 31 row 4. Good seats halfway between third
and the wall 4 rows under the overhang( .ie no sun).
First $40 in hand takes them.
Jimbo
|
88.144 | But since when has it been otherwise with the Red Sox? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 03 1993 16:19 | 16 |
|
> yeah Saw we've all pulled our groins once or twice but it's an invisable
> injury. Seems to me that Clem has alot of these invisable injuries after
> a bad outing....
When you're one of the greatest pitchers of all time and your bad
outings are few and far between, how you feel and what you say after
those rare ones is pretty much irrelevant, I would think. But like I
said, I'm a little worried right now. Roger has been lousy except for
one start since they let him run up those high pitch counts in three
consecutive starts in early May. And while everyone is denying that
there could be any kind of a health or "dead arm" problem, the fact is
that that kind of unnecessary overuse of the franchise was stupid.
glenn
|
88.145 | | CAMONE::WAY | Ruggers eat their dead | Thu Jun 03 1993 16:46 | 14 |
| Actually, a few of the sportswriters/newscasters around here are saying
this:
Roger is having a year that makes him merely human instead
of super human.
At any rate, he's still the best Red Sox pitcher to come along for quite
some time, and I'd take him over that lardass Bob Stanley any day of the
week.....
8^)
'Saw
|
88.146 | | MKFSA::LONG | You can blame mah heart | Thu Jun 03 1993 16:57 | 4 |
| But he can't hold a candle to Dick "the Monstah" Radditz!
billl
|
88.147 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Jun 03 1993 17:02 | 4 |
| Didn't Clemens have the same problems after a few high pitch count games last
July or August?
The Crazy Met
|
88.148 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | The snow has melted, time to tee off! | Fri Jun 04 1993 12:12 | 17 |
|
If I were Hobson I would have Melvin catch for Roger the next time
out. Pena's pitch selection on the first pitch has been awful. I watch a
lot of Red Sox games. Every team that comes in are hacking away at the first
pitch. Roger gave up about 5 or 6 hits on the first pitch, including
Mcrae's triple to lead off the first. KC was swinging at so many first pitches.
I would have had my pitcher throw at somebody's head the first pitch.
Pena's tendancy is to have the pitcher throw a fastball the first
pitch, to get ahead on the count. Start throwing the split finger, or off
speed pitch more on the first pitch. Either that or instead of a 95/95 MPH
fastball, only throw it 90. When you get 2 strikes on the batter then unlease
the 95 mph fastball.
I don't think high pitch counts or groin problem is hurting Clemens.
His pitches have all been the same speed. He has to vary speeds on all his
pitches to make him very effective.
/Ron
|
88.149 | that's rich... | CNTROL::CHILDS | Gunga Drain Indian type WaterBoy | Fri Jun 04 1993 14:13 | 4 |
|
yeah that's it let's BLAM(tm) the catcher......
mike
|
88.150 | | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Fri Jun 04 1993 14:26 | 7 |
| Roger's just being misinterpretated. I couldn't care less what he
says. The main's a horse.
Oh and mikey, I'm intrigued by your p_name. Wot's the significance?
MikeL
|
88.151 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Madonna&Charles,SittingInATree... | Fri Jun 04 1993 14:45 | 5 |
| The thought of Roger pitching in, say a stadium the size of Oakland
with a defensive team, say like the 1990-92 Pirates makes one wonder if
30 wins and a sub 1.00 ERA would be a yearly standard.
/Don
|
88.152 | I would but modesty prevents me... ;^) | CNTROL::CHILDS | Gunga Drain Indian type WaterBoy | Mon Jun 07 1993 09:44 | 8 |
|
Mike, if you be referin' to the Roger p-name, just means he wasn't "Superman"
again. He forgot his cape.....
Anyone care to comment about Phil O'Neil's report in the Worcester Sunday
Telegram yesterday?
mike
|
88.153 | The photo looks alot like Mike | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jun 07 1993 10:35 | 4 |
| �Anyone care to comment about Phil O'Neil's report in the Worcester Sunday
�Telegram yesterday?
Yeah, has anyone seen Phil & Mike in the same room?
|
88.154 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 07 1993 11:02 | 11 |
|
>�Anyone care to comment about Phil O'Neil's report in the Worcester Sunday
>�Telegram yesterday?
>
> Yeah, has anyone seen Phil & Mike in the same room?
Podunk paper, podunk writers. As if I don't already know, what did he
say?
glenn
|
88.155 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jun 07 1993 11:16 | 5 |
| Glenn, Phil said the Sox should really try to trade Roger. It would be
best for the Sox (he's the only tradeable commodity they have and they
really need some help), and for Roger (he ain't going to win a WS in
Boston). He also said Roger is getting an annoying habit of making
excuses after losses, and losing at Fenway.
|
88.156 | | CAMONE::WAY | The sloop is pointing north | Mon Jun 07 1993 11:18 | 9 |
| > Glenn, Phil said the Sox should really try to trade Roger. It would be
> best for the Sox (he's the only tradeable commodity they have and they
> really need some help), and for Roger (he ain't going to win a WS in
> Boston). He also said Roger is getting an annoying habit of making
> excuses after losses, and losing at Fenway.
Sounds like if this guy was any good he'd be working for a real newspaper. 8^)
|
88.157 | ugly again | CNTROL::CHILDS | Gunga Drain Indian type WaterBoy | Wed Jun 09 1993 09:48 | 6 |
|
I'm startin' to worry too Glenn..I figured if I got all over his case he'd
snap out it, like he usually does but that sixth inning last night...I don't
think I've ever seen him that wild...
mike
|
88.158 | | CAMONE::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Wed Jun 09 1993 09:54 | 40 |
| During the rain delay last evening I happened to be on the road, listening
to the local sports talk show on WTIC 1080 (which carries Red Sox games
in CT).
Arnold Dean, long a highly knowledgable sportscaster in this area was
discussing trade possibilities for Roger.
He said that Roger has thrown a lot of pitches in his career, and he
doesn't expect him to have the longevity of Nolan Ryan. He said that
it might not be a bad idea to test the waters. He felt that if you
could get several quality players and a young pitching prospect, it would
be worth a trade of Clemens.
Then the subject came up of the master plan, and the basic slant on that
was that the Sox are set right now to peak in about two years, considering
their minor league talent. Two years coincides with the time when the
team will probably be for sale.
I haven't seen much minor league talent though 8^).
Coincidentally, while the Sox were blowing it last night against the
Tribe, the BritSox wasted a masterful effort by Frank Rodriquez, who
struck out 9 in nine innings. The BritSox posted *4* errors, made
mental errors on the basepaths, and lost the game in extra frames,
to Harrisburg, who's currently sitting atop the Eastern League.
The BritSox have won 12 of their last 17 after a miserable start, and
after a game with Harrisburg tonight, they head out on an 11 day road
trip, returning home 6/22.
If folks are still interested in a BritSox get together, it could easily
be arranged. Tickets are ALWAYS available at the door, and the
Digital building in Rocky Hill is a convenient meeting place about
15 minutes away....
'SAw
|
88.159 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 09 1993 10:22 | 14 |
|
> I'm startin' to worry too Glenn..I figured if I got all over his case he'd
> snap out it, like he usually does but that sixth inning last night...I don't
> think I've ever seen him that wild...
He was much wilder two starts ago. I actually took some encouragement
out of last night, not because I think Clemens didn't blow the game,
which he did, but because he was effective for the first time in weeks,
except for that one big inning which followed a rain delay and a long
inning with the Sox at bat. Baerga nailed him, simple as that. But I
think at least the injury questions may have been put to rest...
glenn
|
88.160 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Jun 09 1993 10:29 | 4 |
|
What happened in the the inning Clemens gave up 4 runs in??
The Crazy Met
|
88.161 | BANG! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabee | Wed Jun 09 1993 10:38 | 7 |
|
One was a 3 run homer dunno about the other.
I remain,
partually helpful?
Kev
|
88.162 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Don Cherry and Seinfeld Roolz | Wed Jun 09 1993 10:56 | 7 |
| TCM -
IN that inning that Clemens gave up four runs, the Indians scored
four times. Amazing coincedence.
JD
|
88.163 | A public service announcement | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 09 1993 13:13 | 9 |
|
Oh yeah, I forgot to mention that you can all throw away Dickster's
authentic souvenir collectable tickets stubs from the famous "Last Game
Tony Pena Hit A Home Run". Somehow the blind squirrel found another
acorn last night, and did it in grand style, a 400+ foot poke to
dead centerfield.
glenn
|
88.164 | Even Joe Bflstskk got lucky once in a bluemoon | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Wed Jun 09 1993 13:21 | 1 |
|
|
88.165 | My ol' pal joe | AKOCOA::BREEN | But in the land of the one-eyed men | Wed Jun 09 1993 18:14 | 11 |
| I was told Joe Bflstck(sic) was pronounce Blitterstick but go ask (the
late) Al.
And re. pitching prospects, phillies have Curt Schilling of the throw
in on the Boddicker - Brady Anderson deal and Tommie Greene received
for three players from braves none of whom I still have ever heard of.
So I can't tell you but it was in glob the other week (finally, I
always wondered what braves could have got for Greene)
I wouldn't object to Roger to Houston for Bagwell and 3 live arms;
make that Texas and Gonzalez and I'll drop it to 1 pitcher.
|
88.166 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Saw: Home of the Big Johnson catalog | Wed Jun 09 1993 18:30 | 1 |
| Speaking of which, rumor is Brady back to Beantown for Viola or Dopson.
|
88.167 | All we've got left with the fading Sox... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 14 1993 12:40 | 18 |
|
I knew Roger wouldn't let me down two games in a row. After sitting
through two pathetic, anemic, comical displays of baseball on Friday
and Saturday, at least there's always hope of some decent baseball with
Clemens, and yesterday it came on one of those classic sunny days of
Sunday afternoon baseball. To top it off we made enough of a ruckus
during the 9th inning outfield warm-ups to prompt my bud Billy Hatcher
to throw us a ball in the CF bleachers (a regular ritual for Hatch in
games that the Sox are winning).
Also ran into ex-SPROTSters Paul Yankowskas of Orioles' fandom fame on
Friday night, and Cath on Saturday afternoon. Cath claimed to be
unaware of Wednesday's get-together at the OPP, so I told her that
someone must be falling down on the job. Her response was something
about doing her laundry instead, out of spite... ;-)
glenn
|
88.168 | | CAMONE::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Mon Jun 14 1993 12:47 | 15 |
| > Friday night, and Cath on Saturday afternoon. Cath claimed to be
> unaware of Wednesday's get-together at the OPP, so I told her that
> someone must be falling down on the job. Her response was something
> about doing her laundry instead, out of spite... ;-)
I believe Walt is the de facto channel to the Cathmeister.
The way I understand it is that I usually contact the folks on the
Internet, Kev contacts others, and Walt has always in the past, contacted
the Cathmeister....
'SAw
|
88.169 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 14 1993 12:50 | 11 |
|
> The way I understand it is that I usually contact the folks on the
> Internet, Kev contacts others, and Walt has always in the past, contacted
> the Cathmeister....
There you go... I didn't want to mention any names, but... ;-)
Seriously though, it sounded like she wouldn't be able to make it
anyway, and said to make sure to let everyone know she says hi...
glenn
|
88.170 | | CAMONE::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Mon Jun 14 1993 12:58 | 8 |
| > There you go... I didn't want to mention any names, but... ;-)
> Seriously though, it sounded like she wouldn't be able to make it
> anyway, and said to make sure to let everyone know she says hi...
No Glenn, tell it like it is. Walt is shirking his duties.
We'll have to have a little chat with him on Wednesday night 8^)
|
88.171 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Jun 14 1993 13:02 | 7 |
|
> We'll have to have a little chat with him on Wednesday night 8^)
Just have Walt pay the bill and he will be sure not to
forget his duties in the future.
The Crazy Met
|
88.172 | | CAMONE::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Mon Jun 14 1993 13:10 | 6 |
| |> We'll have to have a little chat with him on Wednesday night 8^)
|
|Just have Walt pay the bill and he will be sure not to
|forget his duties in the future.
I think YOU'RE at bat on this one.... Walt can be ON DECK....8^)
|
88.173 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Jun 14 1993 13:12 | 6 |
|
re: .172
hmm, I had forgotten about that :-)
The Crazy Met
|
88.174 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Shake your body down to the ground... | Mon Jun 14 1993 14:16 | 5 |
| Au contraire, I told her a LONG time ago... now if she didn't book it
to see youze guys, that's a reflection of YOUZE guys, not me...
"It's possible you told me, Maybe I was having a blonde day..."
- Cathmeiser
|
88.175 | | CAM3::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Mon Jun 14 1993 15:55 | 8 |
| > Au contraire, I told her a LONG time ago... now if she didn't book it
> to see youze guys, that's a reflection of YOUZE guys, not me...
>
> "It's possible you told me, Maybe I was having a blonde day..."
> - Cathmeiser
See if we invite HER again.....8^)
|
88.176 | | ROYALT::ASHE | She's a one in a million girl... | Mon Jun 14 1993 16:02 | 2 |
| Well, she did say something about moving laundry day for you guys...
|
88.177 | | CAM3::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Mon Jun 14 1993 16:30 | 9 |
| >
> Well, she did say something about moving laundry day for you guys...
She just told me she'd move laundry day for ME...well, all the rest
of you too....8^)
'Saw
|
88.178 | | ROYALT::ASHE | She's a one in a million girl... | Mon Jun 14 1993 17:12 | 3 |
| Well, she told me that first (note the timestamp)... but I don't want
to hurt your feelings, so she moved it for 'Saw... that's fine...
|
88.180 | Rumor mill | SKEWED::MCKAY | | Tue Jun 15 1993 12:36 | 6 |
| Heard a hot rumor last night in Worcester. The sox told Eddie
Riley to be ready to move. The trade was Mo Vaughn, Scott Cooper,
adn Ed Riley to San Diego for Sheffield and Benes. The guy that
told me is friends with the Riley family.
Jimbo
|
88.182 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Jun 15 1993 13:16 | 1 |
| I heard it was all the Sox players for Sheffield and McGriff.
|
88.183 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Tue Jun 15 1993 13:41 | 4 |
| Sheffield said "I've been to Boston before and never want to go
back there again"
The Crazy Met
|
88.184 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Tue Jun 15 1993 13:48 | 4 |
| Who once said, "I've never been to Boston, and I ain't goin' back"?
|
88.185 | Yogi Berra? | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | MeetTheNewSox-SameAsTheOldSox | Tue Jun 15 1993 13:52 | 1 |
|
|
88.186 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Tue Jun 15 1993 15:51 | 3 |
| noD\, I don't know, that's why I'm asking. Somebody must have said it.
|
88.187 | Just say MO........ | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Tue Jun 15 1993 17:06 | 11 |
|
Oh and for those of you who watched the game last night. A funny
line was heard to be said by a particular 1b'man who was near one of
the dugouts.
It went like this.
I got it! I got it! I got it! You get it! :-)
Chappy
|
88.188 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Jun 15 1993 17:34 | 7 |
| I don't think so, Chappy.
It was more like
... .... .... .... .... THUD plop
And how is Kevin Maas doing these days?
|
88.189 | Now if you wanna compare Mattingly/Vaugn??????? | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Tue Jun 15 1993 17:54 | 6 |
|
Mac are you Comparing the Yankee 3rd string 1B 2nd string DH to the
Red sux's 1st stringers defense? Or am I reading that note wrong.
Chappy
|
88.190 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Jun 15 1993 18:15 | 4 |
| Sorry for asking a Yankee fan to change his train of thought mid-note.
I was just wondering how Kevin "the next Mickey Mantle" Maas was doing
these days.
|
88.191 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Jun 15 1993 18:20 | 9 |
|
Actually, Maas isn't doing all that badly, hitting some home runs
including a couple key ones, like the game-winner just this past
weekend. If I were a Yanks fan, I'd be more worried about "The Great
Don Mattingly". At least Maas can still reach that short Yankee
Stadium rightfield porch with some regularity...
glenn
|
88.192 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Wed Jun 16 1993 07:45 | 4 |
| This AM, Gil Santos was describing last nights Sox-Yankee game as
"Ugly. That's with a capital U and two g's." :*)
Lee
|
88.193 | A most disgusting exhibition | KALI::MORGAN | | Wed Jun 16 1993 08:43 | 5 |
| That doesn't even come close to describing the ineptitude of this team
Lee. What I watched last night was worse than what I saw an hour
earlier at my son's Little League game. Much worse.
Steve
|
88.194 | Just say Mo..... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Wed Jun 16 1993 09:06 | 7 |
|
I don't worry about Donbo WaugaMAN. Cuz he's better than anyone
the Sox have on their Pathetic team.
Chappy
|
88.195 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Jun 16 1993 10:30 | 4 |
| I think the Yanks 3B and C could take a few lessons from Mo and Melvin.
The Sox finally find some offense and Viola and company go in the tank
in the 5th inning (of course Scott Cooper's error didn't help).
|
88.196 | | CAM3::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Wed Jun 16 1993 10:39 | 17 |
| Yeah, what was THAT?
Couple of questions, since I was going back and forth between the game
and a videotape I was copying.....
a) when and why did Clell Laverne get tossed?
b) what the F--- happened in the fifth?
And was that pathetic in the 8th or what?
'Saw
|
88.197 | not for the squeamish | MKFSA::LONG | Pump it up! A little more to the left. | Wed Jun 16 1993 10:43 | 7 |
| Intersting shot by the camera right after Viola took that shot off
his shin. The zoomed right in on the spot that was hit as the
trainer was applying freeze spray. The lump grew to the size of a
fist right before your eyes.
billl
|
88.198 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Jun 16 1993 10:49 | 13 |
| � a) when and why did Clell Laverne get tossed?
All I know is he was tossed in the 3rd.
� b) what the F--- happened in the fifth?
Viola threw 2 pitches. The first was hit for a homerun, the second was
a single. Either that single or an ensuing batter hit one off of
Viola's shin. There were a couple more hits, a walk, a Scott Cooper
error and Viola was sent to the showers. Greg Harris came in with the
basesloaded and couldn't find the plate and ended up walking 2 runs in
(and he only faced 2 batters). Hesketh came on and gave up a copule
more hits. Melendez came in and finally got the third out.
|
88.199 | | CAM3::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Wed Jun 16 1993 10:55 | 3 |
| Wow.
Oh well.....
|
88.200 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Tide is high but I'm holding on | Wed Jun 16 1993 10:58 | 2 |
| Should be Uggly then, right?
|
88.201 | Go Sox!!!!!! Straight to the cellar... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Wed Jun 16 1993 11:24 | 7 |
|
BAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHhh
Chappy
|
88.202 | Worst you've ever seen? Try 5 days ago... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 16 1993 11:30 | 7 |
|
Hey, last night's game was nowhere near as pathetic or ug-gly as last
Friday's. You bad baseball aficionados (should be an SNL skit) really
do need to start keeping up...
glenn
|
88.203 | You've got the "pathetic" and "Sox" part right though | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 16 1993 11:31 | 9 |
|
> I don't worry about Donbo WaugaMAN. Cuz he's better than anyone
> the Sox have on their Pathetic team.
Whatever you say, Chap. Don't forget to come back in September and
brag about Donbo's 60 RBIs...
glenn
|
88.204 | 2118 or bust.......... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Wed Jun 16 1993 11:46 | 8 |
|
Only if you brag about the Sox's Pathetic last place finish
again. But don't worry Mike Flanagan and Charlie Hough will be Lou's
new help coming in next year.
Chappy
|
88.205 | Longing for the good old days all of a sudden | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 16 1993 12:03 | 16 |
|
> Only if you brag about the Sox's Pathetic last place finish
> again. But don't worry Mike Flanagan and Charlie Hough will be Lou's
> new help coming in next year.
Too cruel, Chappy. But you don't have to convince me, I've been a
realist about this all along. As they say, Lou Gorman "just doesn't get
it". All those fans who were so happy to see the bums Lou brought in
in favor of players who at the very least were at one time able to play
this game (Boggs, Reed, Burks, etc.) are getting what they wanted. More
excitement, a better team attitude. After watching these guys for a
while, those hateable teams and players of the late '80s suddenly look
a whole lot better.
glenn
|
88.206 | HeHeHeHeHe.............. | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Wed Jun 16 1993 12:13 | 9 |
|
Nice to know your a realist. Most of the Sox fans I work with
are very quiet right now, after giving me this line about Dawson's
40 dingers and Ivan's 35 SB's. I just walk by and laugh in there faces
Chappy
|
88.207 | | CAM3::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Wed Jun 16 1993 12:29 | 8 |
| > Nice to know your a realist. Most of the Sox fans I work with
> are very quiet right now, after giving me this line about Dawson's
> 40 dingers and Ivan's 35 SB's. I just walk by and laugh in there faces
Chappy, we've just put you in the M_Air_Brooks there/they're/their Division....
'Saw
|
88.208 | Early 60's all over again | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Wed Jun 16 1993 12:57 | 10 |
| Chappy,
Any Sox fan who got worked up over this group_a_has-beens early in
the year is a Lou Gorman_merde-believing_polyanna idjit.
No defense, power, speed,. Too damn bad they's wasting good pitching.
When do the Pats start?
MikeL
|
88.209 | training camp next month! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabee | Wed Jun 16 1993 13:19 | 1 |
|
|
88.210 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Happy100thBirthdayCrackerJacks! | Wed Jun 16 1993 13:30 | 5 |
| To paraphrase what we used to hear in here circa 1986-91.
"Guess the Yankee fans consider it a successful season if they finish
ahead of the Sox..."
/Don
|
88.211 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Run, Joey run, Joey run.. | Wed Jun 16 1993 13:34 | 4 |
| > <<< Note 88.210 by VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD "Happy100thBirthdayCrackerJacks!" >>>
At least the Yanks sell Cracker Jacks at their stadium...
|
88.212 | Is there another choice? | AKOCOA::BREEN | Soon, just baseball and golf | Wed Jun 16 1993 13:48 | 34 |
| I am not sure if Lou, given full power, could build a team. That said,
Lou Gorman simply does not call the shots for the Sox. Harrington has
final say with Sullivan having some unspecified input. Result,
management by committee.
This makes it difficult for Gorman to negotiate because all of his
"deals" beyond the Lyons type of thing have to be passed by upper mgt.
One example, and this is just how I see it... Gorman plans on a hitter
in right field to replace adequate fielding Brunansky and chooses
Dawson which also covers the black question, another issue complicating
everything, with the intention of signing SD's Jackson with a trade
already worked out.
Then, Jackson wants more $money than Harrington will pay so sox have no
speed demon in center to cover his walking wounded, senior citizen etc
right field brigade not to speak of someone capable to simply play
center field.
Solution. Drop Gorman since why pay Gorman dough for a flunky. Hire
someone from Braves, Jays, As organizations to:
Trade whatever is of value => One Roger Clemons is all I can come up
with, perhaps Cooper, Quintana.. for prospects; any two or three
pitchers plus perhaps Russell to be included in trade bait.
Make the decision on center field and catcher; looks like decision is
made to go with Valentin already at shortstop. My only input here
would be to keep Fletcher at 2nd.
And look towards 95 or 96
Bill
|
88.213 | Donbo never could win a pennant without Wade | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 16 1993 13:50 | 10 |
|
> To paraphrase what we used to hear in here circa 1986-91.
> "Guess the Yankee fans consider it a successful season if they finish
> ahead of the Sox..."
Yeah, I mean the Yankees pick up Wade Boggs to help cover for Don
Mattingly's inadequacies and it goes right to their heads...
glenn
|
88.214 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Wed Jun 16 1993 13:52 | 3 |
| I know where 95 is. Where's 96? It must be a East-West road.
Lee
|
88.215 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Jun 16 1993 14:49 | 4 |
|
When did Gorman take over as GM?
The Crazy Met
|
88.216 | Wade/Jockholder... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Wed Jun 16 1993 14:53 | 14 |
|
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 DEEP BREATH.....HHHHHHHHHHHHHMPPPPPPP.
RE-A few back.
Wrong! Yankee fans consider it a "good season" when they finish
ahead of the Sox. A sucessful season is when they win it all. Which a
Sox fan wouldn't know the feeling unless your over 74!
Inadequacies my Ass.
Unless we're talking about Chicken or Adultery.
Chappy
|
88.217 | We know his sore spot... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 16 1993 16:18 | 9 |
|
> 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 DEEP BREATH.....HHHHHHHHHHHHHMPPPPPPP.
Haw haw haw. Admit it, Chappy, he's practically at the end of the
road. And five good to great seasons don't get you in the Hall of
Fame...
glenn
|
88.218 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Wed Jun 16 1993 16:34 | 7 |
|
No I believe it's about 10 bucks to get in the HOF.
Chappy
|
88.219 | | TORREY::MAY_BR | Clinton,Guinier,Heiser | Wed Jun 16 1993 16:51 | 5 |
|
Which is the only way Mattingly will get in there. Too bad it's too
late for Munson.
brews
|
88.220 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Jun 16 1993 16:52 | 2 |
| Munson had about as many (or maybe fewer, I forget) good years as
Mattingly.
|
88.221 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Don Cherry and Seinfeld Roolz | Wed Jun 16 1993 16:57 | 9 |
| Although given the positions, I'd guess it would be easier
for a Munson, with good numbers (if he had lived, of course), to
make the Hall, then a Mattingly. Seems to be too many good
first base types.
Really, Johnny Bench is really the last great catcher. Fisk
is good, but its longevity that is working for him.
JD
|
88.222 | | TORREY::MAY_BR | Clinton,Guinier,Heiser | Wed Jun 16 1993 16:58 | 5 |
|
Fisk's longevity is reaching Roseian proportions where it may start to
hurt him.
brews
|
88.223 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Jun 16 1993 17:41 | 2 |
| C'mon JD, every good Red Sox fan knows Fisk was much better than
Munson.
|
88.224 | I liked 'em both | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Wed Jun 16 1993 17:42 | 6 |
| -1,
And you was just yapping in another note about LDUC's, Mac?
Tsk, tsk
MikeL
|
88.225 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Jun 16 1993 17:43 | 6 |
|
re: .224
Looking for consistencey from moderators?? you must be kidding! .5 :-)
The Crazy Met
|
88.226 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Don Cherry and Seinfeld Roolz | Thu Jun 17 1993 10:22 | 7 |
| Mac -
No question. But I do think Pudge's longevity, matched
with the dearth of good catching, helps his HOF
chances.
JD
|
88.227 | Vernacular JOCKularity | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Thu Jun 17 1993 10:28 | 14 |
|
Fisk couldn't hold Munsons Jock! He won't make the HOF because
of the tragedy. But if he could have played out his whole career he
would have been a first year inductee.
" Fisk is just now getting credit for everything I have already
done"
Thurman Munson R.I.P
Chappy
|
88.228 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jun 17 1993 10:56 | 6 |
| If If If, Chappy. As I'm sure you'd point out if any Sox fan said "If
that ball didn't go through Buckner's legs", or "If Dent didn't hit
that wimpy pop fly that blew into the screen".
Sox finally got a W last night. Two nights in a row scoring 7 runs --
how about that. Good outing out of John Dopson.
|
88.229 | | CAM3::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Thu Jun 17 1993 11:02 | 11 |
| Chappy,
Your assertion about Munson, filled with the angst and raw
emotion that only a Yankee fan could provide, and none of the
cold logic provided by the more objective baseball fans,
is as full of holes as your statistics were about Wade and
Donbo.....
hth,
'Saw
|
88.230 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Don Cherry and Seinfeld Roolz | Thu Jun 17 1993 11:05 | 3 |
| Hey, we all know Munson flied out his last at bat.
JD
|
88.231 | Thurman 1 Fisk 0 | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Thu Jun 17 1993 11:44 | 8 |
|
JD Your a riot!!!! Not.
In Fisk's 20+ years. How many MVp's did he win? Thank You!!!!!
Chappy
|
88.232 | | CAM3::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Thu Jun 17 1993 12:04 | 8 |
| > In Fisk's 20+ years. How many MVp's did he win? Thank You!!!!!
Yeah. So is that supposed to prove something?
It's a typical Chappy argument -- pull on one stat, isolated from
any context whatsoever, and proclaim your hypothesis to be correct....
'Saw
|
88.233 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Don't fear the reaper... | Thu Jun 17 1993 12:07 | 2 |
| How many Super Bowls did he go to?
|
88.234 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Don Cherry and Seinfeld Roolz | Thu Jun 17 1993 12:07 | 8 |
| Hey for all we know, Old Thurman may have slipped into Rich Gedman
mode and never approached his 'MVP' numbers again.
Perhaps George SteinCheeseBurger woulda messed old Thurman up, forcing
Thurman into free agency, and playing out his days in Arlington,
Lake Erie, Shea Stadium or North of Da Border....
JD
|
88.235 | K sura sura | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Thu Jun 17 1993 12:17 | 10 |
|
Re JD. But we'll never know will we?
Re Saw, You say you want some proof. I gave you a fact and I'm wrong
Geez maybe I should just agree with whatever you Sox fans say. Lord
knows your Judgement is always correct. I mean you root for a hell of a
franchise.
Chappy
|
88.236 | SKYDOME HERE I COME | WMOIS::FASSETT_E | | Thu Jun 17 1993 12:21 | 5 |
| re-235
Hey Chappy its about time you started to think right.
FAST EDDIE
|
88.237 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Clinton,Guinier,Heiser | Thu Jun 17 1993 12:48 | 7 |
|
> Re JD. But we'll never know will we?
Chappy, we will know. The day that Fisk is inducted into the Hall,
and Munson isn't.
brews
|
88.238 | | CAM3::WAY | Ye can nae dispute tha' | Thu Jun 17 1993 12:54 | 13 |
| On a serious note, because I do admit to enjoying occasionally busting
on Chappy (whom I DO respect as a die hard Yankme fan), I'll enter this.
If you are a Thurmon Munson fan, I suggest you read the
short story "The Night Manny Mota Broke the Record", by
W.P. Kinsella. It's in a collection published by Penquin
Books called _The_Thrill_Of_The_Grass_. It deals with
Thurmon, and you'll like it.
hth,
'Saw
|
88.239 | | GIAMEM::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Product Management | Thu Jun 17 1993 13:05 | 3 |
| Here's one Sox fan who thinks that Munson was better than Fisk.
Mark.
|
88.240 | No bandwagons here..... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | RETIRE #32 Silver and Black... | Thu Jun 17 1993 13:15 | 9 |
|
Uh another realist. That makes 2 I know. :-)
Saw I too respect any Fan Sox or not that sticks with his
team Pathetic or not.:-)
Chappy
|
88.241 | Current catching deficiency no reflection on Fisk | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 17 1993 13:15 | 18 |
|
> Here's one Sox fan who thinks that Munson was better than Fisk.
Maybe as a hitter, at his peak. Munson was an intelligent guy who got
what he had out of his ability, but he wasn't the defensive catcher
that Fisk was. And catcher and shortstop are the most important
defensive positions on the field.
The business about Fisk (and by extension Munson) only being considered
great because of a decline in the quality of catchers is nonsense.
Catchers have never been good hitters in general and Fisk's record as a
power-hitting backstop stacks up with anyone's, and not due to his
longevity. Bench was better defensively, but even Bench only has a few
superior seasons with the bat. Fisk goes into the HOF totally without
shame, even if he has hung on too long.
glenn
|
88.242 | (8^) | PFSVAX::JACOB | You're from N.A.M.B.L.A.?? *BLAM*!!! | Mon Jun 21 1993 16:58 | 15 |
|
>>If If If, Chappy. As I'm sure you'd point out if any Sox fan said "If
>>that ball didn't go through Buckner's legs", or "If Dent didn't hit
>>that wimpy pop fly that blew into the screen".
"IF":
If a frog had wings, he wouldn't bump his a$$ every time he jumps
If yer uncle had t_ts, you'd call him "Aunt"
And so on and so forth
JaKe
|
88.243 | They're freeeeeeeefallllllinn' | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Tue Jun 22 1993 13:48 | 7 |
| GONGGONGGONGGONGGONGGONGGONGGONGGONGGONGGONGGONGGO....
and counting...
long gong,
MikeL
|
88.244 | Aaron Sele is GOD!!!11 | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Imus is coming to Boston... | Tue Jun 22 1993 13:50 | 1 |
|
|
88.245 | SOX WIN! | MKFSA::LONG | Life's a dance, you learn as you go | Wed Jun 23 1993 08:13 | 4 |
| Hey, they may never loose another game. The streak is at TWO!
billl
|
88.246 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the fun begins....... | Wed Jun 23 1993 09:33 | 5 |
| BFD.... I want them to lose lose lose!!! Then Harrington will have
to sell and we get Sully... This franchise S*CKS bigtime....
I'm already cheering for the Yankees.......
REK
|
88.247 | I'll miss him... | CNTROL::CHILDS | Deceptively old, almost mature | Wed Jun 23 1993 09:38 | 4 |
|
If Sele pitches a no hitter tonight it could put Roger on the blocks....
mike
|
88.248 | It only takes 2 over the hill players | JUNCO::GARRY | Dallas Cowboys back where they belong #1 | Wed Jun 23 1993 10:28 | 8 |
|
Come on Mike...maybe they would trade him to your Cleveland team for a
couple of 35 year olds.........come to think of it does Cleveland have
anyone that old????
Tom
|
88.249 | we all know what happens when he gets too wound up.... | CNTROL::CHILDS | Deceptively old, almost mature | Wed Jun 23 1993 11:06 | 6 |
|
that'd be great Tom. It would save the Tribe atleast 5 losses a year as
Rog usually manages to pitch 4 or 5 games against them per year. It's easier
on his 'physicee' to pitch against non-contenders....
mike
|
88.250 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Jun 23 1993 12:16 | 5 |
|
MikeC you're getting slow. I figured by now you would surely have posted
that Rog is playing in a golf tournament today while he is on the DL.
The Crazy Met
|
88.251 | it only hurts when I... | CNTROL::CHILDS | Deceptively old, almost mature | Wed Jun 23 1993 12:22 | 5 |
|
Not surprising TCM. Rog said it only hurts when he looses, I mean pushes
off the mound...
;^)
|
88.252 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Imus is coming to Boston... | Wed Jun 23 1993 13:20 | 4 |
| Roger's playing golf to stay in shape while he rehabilitates. What
a guy!
/Don
|
88.253 | Damn straight what a guy! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 23 1993 13:24 | 8 |
|
Geez, lighten up, guys. Clemens is probably just honing his game for
participation in some charity golfing events. Roger Clemens, 1993
Boston Red Sox nominee for the Roberto Clemente Sportsmanship and
Community Service Award!
glenn
|
88.255 | | CAMONE::WAY | She had a plethora of girth | Thu Jun 24 1993 09:51 | 8 |
| I like the way he worked out of the 4th, when Harper hit the double and
Mo blew the double play ball.
I was on my way back from a track workout and it made mighty interesting
listening....
'SAw
|
88.256 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Look OUT! Its A HYPE-A-SAURUS!! | Thu Jun 24 1993 10:37 | 5 |
| Impressive. I won't make any mention of the hype and platitudes I
heard on various broadcasts. We know from Mac that only happens
in New York with folks like Maas.
JD
|
88.257 | handwritting is on the wall | CNTROL::CHILDS | Deceptively old, almost mature | Thu Jun 24 1993 10:48 | 11 |
|
>> Impressive. I won't make any mention of the hype and platitudes I
>> heard on various broadcasts. We know from Mac that only happens
>> in New York with folks like Maas.
It's a conspiracy to run bad boy Rog out of town cause he's always tellin'
it like it is and tell the writers to go crap in their hats....
mike
|
88.258 | | CAMONE::WAY | She had a plethora of girth | Thu Jun 24 1993 10:53 | 16 |
| The golf tourney Rog was in yesterday was the GHO Pro-Am. I couldn't go,
had to work.
Heard the Sox announcer come up with a great one last night. Sele is
pitching to Pags, with men on first and third, one out.
"Pags is a candidate to hit into a double play, if he hits
the ball on the ground, right at someone"
I'm saying to myself, "No sh*t, Sherlock".....
'Saw
|
88.259 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Look OUT! Its A HYPE-A-SAURUS!! | Thu Jun 24 1993 10:58 | 6 |
| Saw -
The GHO. One of my favorite stories of all time comes from that
tourney..
JD
|
88.260 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Still looking for that bluejean baby queen | Thu Jun 24 1993 11:03 | 2 |
| Well?
|
88.261 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Thu Jun 24 1993 13:36 | 5 |
| I think the Sox announcers are the worst team I've ever heard.
Some of their remarks are so obvious, and their voices are terrible.
Lee
|
88.263 | Sean gets all the $$$$$$$ | CNTROL::CHILDS | Deceptively old, almost mature | Thu Jun 24 1993 13:43 | 7 |
|
>> Sean McDonough is cool. Too bad Bob has to be there with him, though.
my guess is that Bob work for nothing.....
mike
|
88.264 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Thu Jun 24 1993 13:56 | 3 |
| Sorry, I mean the radio crew.
Lee
|
88.266 | I *was* impressed... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 24 1993 13:59 | 13 |
|
> Impressive. I won't make any mention of the hype and platitudes I
> heard on various broadcasts. We know from Mac that only happens
> in New York with folks like Maas.
Sometimes guys pitch well in a debut because they're lucky. From what
I saw this was not one of those times. Aaron Sele had a fantastic
curveball working last night. If that's the norm, and he can put it
together with a rumored low-90 mph fastball, a changeup and maybe a
slider, he'll be a nice starting pitcher, I think.
glenn
|
88.267 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Clinton,Guinier,Heiser | Thu Jun 24 1993 14:08 | 7 |
|
Actually, Maas didn't get the hype until he joined the bigs, and hit a
bunch of homers early. Meulins, and a host of OF's who are now all
forgotten, but at the time were the "next Mickey Mantle," were part of
the NY hype machine.
brews
|
88.268 | | CAMONE::WAY | She had a plethora of girth | Thu Jun 24 1993 14:13 | 15 |
| I was referring to the fellows on the radio.
I didn't find them particularly awful, it was just that one remark that
stuck out.
Like I mean, if *I* hit the ball right at someone on the ground I'd be
a candidate for a double play -- although with my speed if I put the ball
into play ANYWHERE on the ground I'd be a candidate for a DP, even if
no one was on base 8^)
But if Carl Lewis hits the ball on the ground right at someone he's gonna
be a candidate for a DP too.....sheesh....
'Saw
|
88.269 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Thu Jun 24 1993 14:20 | 9 |
| Saw, in the first inning when Greenwell got put out at the plate after
running thru a stop sign at 3rd, and then (can't remember who) someone
drove in the 2nd run, the Jerry of the due says: "Joe, that out by
Greenwell has cost the Sox a run." NO KIDDING!!!
This is a 15Watt announcer in a very bright world.
Lee
|
88.270 | | DECWET::METZGER | PBS = Profitable Barney Station | Thu Jun 24 1993 14:20 | 8 |
|
I would take the remark as a snide crack at the Red Sox fielding ability. As
in, the only way they can turn a dp is if the ground ball is hit directly at
somebody....
I hear the range of the infield is lacking this season...
Metz
|
88.271 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Thu Jun 24 1993 14:23 | 8 |
| Bres -
The New York Hype Machine? Geez I remember the Boston Hype Machine
in full gear with Glenn Hoffman, Dave Stapleton, et al...
Its the same all over.
JD
|
88.272 | | CAMONE::WAY | She had a plethora of girth | Thu Jun 24 1993 14:52 | 19 |
| Lee,
That's funny. (Duh!)
Metz,
The funniest part of the whole thing was that the next pitch was hit
on the ground to Mo Vaughn, and he played it off his chest. At that point
he got Pags at first.
Then they come out with "If Vaughn had played that ball properly they
would have had a double play".
I'll be I could that job as well....8^)
'Saw
|
88.273 | | DUGROS::ROSS | Whoot! There it is! | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:06 | 5 |
| Glenn Hoffman and Dave Stapleton were overhyped??? Can you offer some
background? I don't remember anything being written about Stapleton.
He came out of nowhere, won the 10th Player Award I think, then proceeded
to have five consecutive years, each worse than the previous. Who hyped
him? The media or the fanatics?
|
88.274 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:07 | 5 |
| > The media or the fanatics?
same difference
The Crazy Met
|
88.275 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:14 | 11 |
| Were quite a few pulp pieces about both Doug. Worst hadda be
the Glenn Hoffman 'family' hype piece, about playing wiffleball
in the back yard, etc...
Oh yeah, I keep forgettin - if a Boston paper or fan throws
accolades at an athlete, its just good, solid fandom. If a NY
paper does it, its hype.
(I'm sure Doug Flutie didn't get any hype...)
JD
|
88.276 | a little chuckle | MKFSA::LONG | Life's a dance, you learn as you go | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:15 | 10 |
| Nice flattering article on the Red Sox in this weeks SI. It said
the Red Sox defense was like Stonehenge...
o real old
o can't move
o and everyone wonders why they are placed the way they are
billl
|
88.277 | I think JD needs to learn the meaning of "hype" | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:17 | 9 |
|
> Were quite a few pulp pieces about both Doug. Worst hadda be
> the Glenn Hoffman 'family' hype piece, about playing wiffleball
> in the back yard, etc...
There you go, a Hall of Fame endorsement if I've ever seen one! ;-)
glenn
|
88.278 | | DUGROS::ROSS | Whoot! There it is! | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:21 | 13 |
| So the hype had nothing to do with baseball talent and only with "up-close-
and-personal" type fluff? I think there's a big difference between that
kind of fluff and the stuff that came out about Jay Buhner being the next
Mickey Mantle.
Did you have a problem with the media presenting an athlete in a positive
light based on his off-the-field life? I'm really trying to get a fix
on this Boston overhype obsession you've presented over the years. The
Boston media does not have a monopoly on it, nor did they invent it. It
exists in every big city sports town. If lemmings choose to ingest it
and regurgitate it back over the dinner table/air waves/etc. who cares?
{ Sorry for the imagery that may evoke :-)}
|
88.279 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:26 | 10 |
|
Doug let me see if I understand JD's point and in that way explain it
to you. JD is not contending that the NY media dies not overhype players.
JD is simply saying that the Boston media does the same and that he gets
tired of hearing folks bash the NY media when the papers they read do the
same thing and they don't bitch about it.
Now, is simple enough to comprehend??
The Crazy Met
|
88.280 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:38 | 19 |
| TCM = Yep
Glenn and Doug - it was more than just "off the field" - it was
plain and simple hype. About this .300_+ guy taking the place
by storm, etc...It used wiffleball to show how this incredible
guy had been a fine athelete since his baby days.
Heck - RIch Gedman was hyped after his first few years.
THere aren't many folks in here who have LIVED in both NY and
Boston. My assertion is that the media is very similar in
both cities. Except in the case of dredging up teams from
the past...
Sort of like how its boston folks who keep talking about the
early Knicks being hyped as the next dynasty - when we know
it was just more bile coming from the cigar sucker.
JD
|
88.281 | Sniff... let's all stop picking on those po', po' New Yorkers | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:39 | 17 |
|
> Doug let me see if I understand JD's point and in that way explain it
> to you. JD is not contending that the NY media dies not overhype players.
> JD is simply saying that the Boston media does the same and that he gets
> tired of hearing folks bash the NY media when the papers they read do the
> same thing and they don't bitch about it.
I guess I missed the NY-media bash segue to JD's "non-mention" of the
media hype and platitudes heaped on Aaron Sele. Hell, right now by
just about everyone's admission (*especially* the media's, and
*especially* concerning the Red Sox) the Boston sports scene is at an
all-time low but if there's any kind of positive commentary whatsoever
anywhere at any time we can rest assured that our faithful watchdog
will be there to pick up on it. A job well done, JD! ;-)
glenn
|
88.282 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:41 | 6 |
| But Glenn - my comment was to Mac - the one who is ALWAYS pointing
out NY hype.
You just did yer valiant charger thang again!
JD
|
88.283 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:44 | 5 |
| > You just did yer valiant charger thang again!
Impossible. Chivalry IS DEAD!
The Crazy Met
|
88.284 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:54 | 12 |
| � Nice flattering article on the Red Sox in this weeks SI. It said
� the Red Sox defense was like Stonehenge...
�
� o real old
That's true of the OF, but not the IF. In fact the youth of the Sox
starting IF was being questioned at the start of the season.
JD, do you spend all of your time listening to sports talk shows,
flipping TV channels and reading the Globe and Herald? If not, you
must spend alot more time than I do because I haven't heard any hype of
the players you've mentioned, Sele included.
|
88.285 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Jun 24 1993 15:57 | 5 |
| Mac,
you just accept the stuff as gospel, so of course you
don't see the hype.
|
88.286 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jun 24 1993 16:05 | 9 |
| �But Glenn - my comment was to Mac - the one who is ALWAYS pointing
�out NY hype.
Huh? The only thing I can think of was a comment I made (as a joke,
and you know about jokes, Air Nation Detroit JD) asking how Kevin "the
next Mickey Mantle" Maas was doing these days a couple of weeks ago.
Anyone reading the Red Sox and Baseball conferences when Maas broke on
the scene should remember the hype there.
|
88.287 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Jun 24 1993 16:20 | 13 |
| I'm forever reading in here (from one particualr source) about Boston
media hype blah, blah blah... But when asked for evidence all I ever
get is stuff like this:
>> Were quite a few pulp pieces about both Doug. Worst hadda be
>> the Glenn Hoffman 'family' hype piece, about playing wiffleball
>> in the back yard, etc...
If that's the best you can come up then it must be that you have an
axe to grind because that don't even compare to the hype when the Knicks
took two from the Bulls. That's not to say that there isn't any media
hype in Boston I just think you're overly overly (throw in another overly)
sensitive to it.
|
88.288 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Thu Jun 24 1993 16:36 | 19 |
| Tomjmy
NO, you are wrong. ALl I say is that there is media hype in both
Boston and New York. Most of the Boston fains in here refuse
to admit the possibility. C'mon man, remember the hype when
the Celtics trashed the Lakers in the playoffs one year (and
the GLobe/Herald/TV stories about 'Kareem is done') - that's the
type of thing that is shrugged off by bostonians, but if NY
does it - its MEDIA HYPE>
I don't deny media hype in NY. I don't deny it in Boston either.
Actually, the axe to grind always falls squarely in the hands of
Bostonians. Also, I always noticed how LA was another hype
place. Try to tell me Lawwy Biwd wasn't overly hyped in this
town Tommy. More than Patrick Ewing.
JD
|
88.289 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jun 24 1993 16:56 | 4 |
| �ALl I say is that there is media hype in both
�Boston and New York.
As many will attest to, you say alot more than that.
|
88.290 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Thu Jun 24 1993 17:06 | 6 |
| No Mac - that's what I say. It's folks like you who go
through denial that have the problems with it. An article
about Kevin Maas is hype. An article about Kevin Morton is
good journalism.
JD
|
88.291 | ...and the winner is... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 24 1993 18:46 | 22 |
|
Again, seems to me that 99.9% of this hot air about "hype" is emanating
from one source. But if push came to shove and we really had to make
a call on this ridiculous subject, I'd still have to rate New York the
clear winner. Any city and its media that sincerely believed that the
New York Mets were a division title contender (don't deny it; you know
who you are!) after what they saw last year from that broken-down
sorry-assed ballclub that did nothing but get a year older in the
off-season just can't be topped. I even recall TCM telling me that
anyone who believed that the Yankees would be better than the Mets
this year (I did, because it was beyond obvious) had to be certifiably
insane (and the only reason for that distinction between the teams
inside New York is that the Mets clearly outnumbered the Yanks in
aging, overpaid, overhyped "stars" coming into the season). There may
have been a very few in Boston who had the wool pulled over their eyes
about a similarly but still nowhere near as sorry team like the Red Sox
(the vast majority including most of the media saw what was going on),
but, sorry, if you can hype the stinking 1993 New York Mets and get
people to believe in them, you can hype anything!
glenn
|
88.292 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '93 | Thu Jun 24 1993 22:06 | 5 |
| yabbut the NY media was not the only one that chose the Mets to contend
in 1993.
The Crazy Met
|
88.293 | All you have to do is walk to any street corner to see it... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Jun 25 1993 10:22 | 16 |
|
> yabbut the NY media was not the only one that chose the Mets to contend
> in 1993.
I certainly didn't see such a prediction in any of the reputable
national publications, like Mazeroski, BB Weekly, etc. But I was
informed by the NYMETS notesfile that many if not *most* in the NY
media were picking the Mets to win it, not just "contend". What a
bunch of dupes. Let's face it, the tabloid tradition of
front-running, then scapegoating, permeates the city of NY to a far
greater degree than Boston. I think this is fairly obvious, but I
anxiously await JD telling me that I'm full of it, and offering the
Glenn Hoffman youth wiffle-ball champion story as proof. ;-)
glenn
|
88.294 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Fri Jun 25 1993 10:41 | 4 |
|
Just like the Boston media expected the Red Sox to compete in 1992.
The Crazy Met
|
88.295 | Night and day... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Jun 25 1993 10:49 | 11 |
|
> Just like the Boston media expected the Red Sox to compete in 1992.
Maybe marginally, but not to win it. I wouldn't hold my breath waiting
for the next time the Boston media hypes a team capable of playing .300
baseball (perhaps a modern-day watermark for futility from an
established, non-expansion team?) as a division *favorite*. The Boston
media is far more critical, especially of the Red Sox, than that.
glenn
|
88.296 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Fri Jun 25 1993 11:32 | 6 |
| And the NY media is on a bashing spree of the Mets; they haven't knocked the
bat boys or the ball girls yet, but I'm sure they'll get to it.
The Boston media is no better than the NY one and has an incredible
provincial outlook as well.
The Crazy Met
|
88.297 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Fri Jun 25 1993 11:38 | 32 |
| Glenn -
YOu are right. The Boston papers, including the
clearly accurate Boston Herald, never hype, never
speculate. ONly NY does. Did I think the Mets
could compete - yes, with these caveats - 1. the NL
East
looked fairly weak, with the Bucs losing more players,
and every team having fairly obvious weaknesses, and
2. the hope that some of the injured players like
HoJo and Saberhagen, Franco, etc., would have
decent years.
Instead, it never happened.
I find it interesting that you and the rest of your
cabal call me biased, yet never see anything wrong
with Boston, just NY. Like I said, I lived both
places, and speak from experience. I don't deny
NY hypes. Greg Jeffries was a perfect example of
too much hype.
I remember every year when I was school the GLobe
would pick the Pats to win the AFC, da Broons to
win it, the Sox to winit. That, of course wasn't
hype.
Hey, I'll take the word of a Penns. native who
lives in New Hampshire to know all about New York
and Boston - two places I don't think you've ever
even lived...
JD
|
88.298 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:02 | 7 |
| JD, you only seem to deal in absolutes. It's "always" or "never"
or "every" or "not one". I have yet to see one person say the Boston
media doesn't hype. Not one. (how's that for an absolute) Care to
point out to me where someone did? The issue, as I see it, is that
there's much more hype in New York. To me, that would seem to be a
given, if only because there's much more media. Is it your assertion
that there is *less* media hype in New York than in Boston?
|
88.299 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Clinton,Guinier,Heiser | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:05 | 12 |
|
--The Three Stages of a JD LDUC--
Stage I Yes I do. No you don't. Yes I do. No you don't.
Yes I do. No you don't. Yes I do. No you don't.
Yes I do. No you don't. Yes I do. No you don't.
Stage II I was/lived there/did that. It wasn't that way.
Stage III Uh-oh, I'm losing. Put in a sarcastic reply agreeing with
the adversary.
|
88.300 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:06 | 15 |
| Tommy
Nope, not my assertion. IN fact, I agree with your
more hype due to more media. Face it, NY is what,
10 times larger than Boston - so you'll get a more
of everything. But percentage wise, I feel that
it is fairly close.
And Tommy, it certainly seems that over the years,
folks haven't felt Boston hypes anyone or anything.
Now, I caint talk about the Clinton Gazette or
those other papers from your home town area...
JD
|
88.301 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:07 | 5 |
| Bruce -
Stick to soccer, or backing up Mikey.
JD
|
88.302 | You don't have to take my word for it... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:18 | 18 |
|
> Hey, I'll take the word of a Penns. native who
> lives in New Hampshire to know all about New York
> and Boston - two places I don't think you've ever
> even lived...
Again, I'm relying on my sources such as the YANKEE and NYMETS files
who quite often report that there is an *extreme* frontrunning,
hype-driven media bias between the tabloids and WFAN that approaches
sickening levels. Stuff like rabid attention being paid to the teams
at the beginning of the season only to be followed by total abandonment.
One Yankees' fan has even been insisting that the absolutely terrific
performance of the Yankee supersubs (who I've defended) in keeping
that team in very serious contention is insufficient because "New York
demands stars". I don't even have to write my own material! ;-)
glenn
|
88.303 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:26 | 9 |
| The Mets file? Where? Hardly been anything in there.
Lots of criticism.
Yankee file - never been in it, neverwill
Then again Glenn, there are some in the Red Sox file
who spout also.
JD
|
88.304 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:26 | 12 |
|
re Brews
Pretty damn funny. First time I've laughed out loud reading this conf-
erence in awhile.
re Glenn and JD
One need only look at the extreme (and it was EXTREME) media hype in NY
before the Knicks-Bulls series to get a classic example. No way there's
that much hype in Boston before a *conference* championship series.
|
88.305 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:27 | 11 |
| Tommy -
When Bird the Savior came to town, there was EXTREME
hype in the Boston Media. ALong with foaming of
the mouth by the faithful.
Twas amazing.
And there was national hype over the Knicks/Bulls.
JD
|
88.306 | ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:33 | 10 |
|
> Then again Glenn, there are some in the Red Sox file
> who spout also.
I understand that. And in the media, etc. The only reason I got into
this is that I got tired after about three straight days of being fed
glaring examples of Boston hype, and because I knew it'd be fun.
glenn
|
88.307 | | MKFSA::LONG | Life's a dance, you learn as you go | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:50 | 11 |
| >>Hey, I'll take the word of a Penns. native who
>>lives in New Hampshire to know all about New York
>>and Boston - two places I don't think you've ever
>>even lived...
Now why go draggin' me into this LDUC????
billl
|
88.308 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:58 | 18 |
|
>> When Bird the Savior came to town, there was EXTREME
>> hype in the Boston Media. ALong with foaming of
>> the mouth by the faithful.
Only because he did something spectacular every night and delivered
three titles. Unfortunately, New York hasn't had a star of equal mag-
nitude in a long time so we can only imagine what the hype would have
been like for a Lakers-Knicks series back in the '80s. If the hype for
the Bulls-Knicks series for just the conference championship is any indi-
cation, Armegeddon wouldn't get as much press.
>> And there was national hype over the Knicks/Bulls.
I really didn't see any other than the networks that were covering the
games. I did see front page stories in every New York paper with three
inch headlines. I guess it was a pretty big deal down there.
|
88.309 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Fri Jun 25 1993 14:10 | 25 |
| It's ALWAYS been my contention that Boston papers over-hype. I can't
compare it to NY papers, or compare any of the other media. I'll also
state that I think most of the Boston-based radio sport shows
over-hype, primarily just after a trade, or the beginning of a season,
or when the active team wins 3 in a row.
Conversely, I also think that they are overly critical when things are
going bad. For whatever reason, they seem to want perfection, and
inning by inning, not just game by game.
This has resulted in most of the callers to radio shows thinking of
themselves as the only people on the earth who have all the answers, or
that they are united with every single sports fan in N.E. in hating Lou
Gorman, or the coach/GM/owner of any of the local teams (Save big Red).
Parcells is a God, and he hasn't even fielded a team yet. If the Pats
lose 4 or 5 in a row, he'll be dammed until he wins a SB. Not just get
to the SB, but winning it.
I'm sad that so many people seem to take sprots so seriously. Like, it
isn't any fun unless we win the damn World Championship.
I wonder if, down South, Unser fans hate Andretti, and vice-versa. Is
auto racing taking so seriously?
Lee, who used to just enjoy watching professionals play
|
88.310 | There's no hype like bought-and-paid-for hype | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Jun 25 1993 17:45 | 37 |
|
> It's ALWAYS been my contention that Boston papers over-hype. I can't
> compare it to NY papers, or compare any of the other media. I'll also
> state that I think most of the Boston-based radio sport shows
> over-hype, primarily just after a trade, or the beginning of a season,
> or when the active team wins 3 in a row.
It doesn't help when the particular radio station owns the rights to
the team's broadcasts. Then quite realistically it becomes the show
host's job to hype. WRKO still hasn't given up on the Red Sox, and
some of the apologists they have over there are constantly working
serious overtime trying to convince people that things are okay
with the Sox, they're still in it and they're just working through
some problems, etc. I was laughing out loud the other night when on
the pre-game program the host and his guest "expert" (Joe Guiliotti,
who has been at the Red Sox' banquet trough far too long, imo) were
insisting that the physical problems that Andre Dawson is having
could have happened to *anyone*, and were simply the result of a freak
accident caused by stepping on first base the wrong way in spring
training. Serious team-fed spin control, and a total joke at that.
> I'm sad that so many people seem to take sprots so seriously. Like, it
> isn't any fun unless we win the damn World Championship.
I've never been a big "championship or nothing" guy. If I were, the
Red Sox wouldn't be my primary Boston rooting interest. However, it is
frustrating as hell to see the same mistakes committed again and again
and then re-packaged as something new and different, when I (personally)
would be satisfied to see a young, homegrown, re-built team for a
change, even if they are losing (which is where we come back to the at
least invigorating Aaron Sele "hype", I guess). To that extent, because
I invest a fair amount of time and money in taking in the games (which I
still generally enjoy), I do "take it seriously". Not enough to call
into talk radio, though. ;-)
glenn
|
88.311 | | CAMONE::WAY | Nobles of the Mystic Shrine | Mon Jun 28 1993 08:57 | 14 |
| Well, I hate to interrupt this amazing debate over the state of the
Fourth Estate, but did anyone happen to notice that the Red Sox swept the
Tigers over the weekend?
All of a sudden the Sox found some offense, and even made up for Viola's
poor pitching.
I mean, even Hesketh looked good.
I forget which sportscaster is was but someone called them the "Sybil" Sox
the other evening......
'Saw
|
88.312 | GO RED SOX! WHAT A TEAM!! | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Imus is coming to Boston | Mon Jun 28 1993 09:14 | 2 |
|
/Don for the HypeMachine
|
88.313 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the fun begins....... | Mon Jun 28 1993 09:35 | 6 |
| Is it any coincidence that the Red S*cks start winning when Roger "God"
Clemens is placed on the DL????
REK
|
88.314 | | CAMONE::WAY | Nobles of the Mystic Shrine | Mon Jun 28 1993 09:47 | 17 |
| > Is it any coincidence that the Red S*cks start winning when Roger "God"
> Clemens is placed on the DL????
You know, REK, there could be something to that.
Perhaps the team had gotten a bit lazy, depending on Roger for too much.
When he went out with the injury, psychologically they probably dug down
a little deeper and subconsciously reached a new level.
I've seen stuff like that happen before with teams I've been on -- the star
is out, folks are a little worried, but they start to make up for it, and
realize they can do it without the star, and momentum builds....
'Saw
|
88.315 | | ROYALT::ASHE | STOP! You're bendin' the shafts!!! | Mon Jun 28 1993 10:49 | 4 |
| Is it a coincedence that the teams they beat had losing streaks going
into it? I don't know, it's a glimmer of hope, but wait until they
play someone who's not in a slump...
|
88.316 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Deceptively old, almost mature | Mon Jun 28 1993 11:29 | 26 |
| <<< Note 88.314 by CAMONE::WAY "Nobles of the Mystic Shrine" >>>
>>> Is it any coincidence that the Red S*cks start winning when Roger "God"
>>> Clemens is placed on the DL????
>> You know, REK, there could be something to that.
>> Perhaps the team had gotten a bit lazy, depending on Roger for too much.
>> When he went out with the injury, psychologically they probably dug down
>> a little deeper and subconsciously reached a new level.
>> I've seen stuff like that happen before with teams I've been on -- the star
>> is out, folks are a little worried, but they start to make up for it, and
>> realize they can do it without the star, and momentum builds....
or maybe Wade was right and Rog is the clubhouse problem with his ego???
probably just a league conspiracy to fill the sits for the rest of the
year. A little hot streak before the break to sell out the second half...
;^)
|
88.317 | Aching backs and creaky knees just aren't always willing | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 28 1993 11:48 | 11 |
|
> Is it a coincedence that the teams they beat had losing streaks going
> into it?
Not at all. Six in a row does not undo the damage of 16 out of 19,
unfortunately. But as I told the Sawmain at least this team is to be
commended for not giving up. They're still going to lose more than
they win but there is *some* effort there...
glenn
|
88.318 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the fun begins....... | Tue Jun 29 1993 09:15 | 5 |
| Glenn, make that 7 in a row... Mil best pitcher has been pushed back
and won't face the Sox. Some rookie is going to start tomorrow's game..
THis stinks... I want them in LAST PLACE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
REK
|
88.319 | You fair-weather fan you REK! ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Jun 29 1993 10:16 | 1 |
|
|
88.320 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Imus is coming to Boston | Tue Jun 29 1993 13:31 | 5 |
| MikeC, great news! There's a restaurant in Warwick R.I. called
"ROGER CLEMENS SPORTS WORLD", and you know who is associated with it.
Give me a call when you're free and we'll do lunch there.
/Don
|
88.321 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Deceptively old, almost mature | Tue Jun 29 1993 14:06 | 11 |
|
> MikeC, great news! There's a restaurant in Warwick R.I. called
> "ROGER CLEMENS SPORTS WORLD", and you know who is associated with it.
> Give me a call when you're free and we'll do lunch there.
why not the next ::Sprots get together....pick a night the soxs have off
and much like my hero "Saw knock Kelly Stouffer on his butt maybe I can
belt "his highness"....
;^)
|
88.322 | Mike to take on Rog, Film @ 11... | CAMONE::WAY | Nobles of the Mystic Shrine | Tue Jun 29 1993 15:13 | 21 |
| |> MikeC, great news! There's a restaurant in Warwick R.I. called
|> "ROGER CLEMENS SPORTS WORLD", and you know who is associated with it.
|> Give me a call when you're free and we'll do lunch there.
|
|
|why not the next ::Sprots get together....pick a night the soxs have off
|and much like my hero "Saw knock Kelly Stouffer on his butt maybe I can
|belt "his highness"....
Hmmmm.....
There was a Bobby Valentine's restaurant like that in the next town
over from Newport. Ate there after rugby lasted year. I wonder
if Rog bought into that "franchise"
Mike, I'd love to be there when you knock Rog on his butt. Can I
bring my camera? 8^)
'Saw
|
88.323 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Imus is coming to Boston | Tue Jul 06 1993 17:26 | 5 |
| You know, when one looks at the talent on this team one might be
tempted to say they're overachieving, but I know that JD can point out
the plethora of All Stars on the Slobs.
/Don
|
88.324 | | WREATH::DEVLIN | Agassi - the Hairless wonder... | Wed Jul 07 1993 10:24 | 11 |
| Well /Slash, if pushed, I could point to God Clemens, ex-God Viola, phenom (as
I've heard him called...) Sele, Big Mo, etc...
But I've been advocating the Sox clean house and build the dang team and take
the lumps of being truly bad for a few years. All I fear is that the Sox
will pull a Broons - get hot long enough to make them respectable, enabling
many fans to be able to do the "in the last 30 years, the Sox have blah blah",
for Lou Gorman to say "Wewerecloselastyearandwithafewbreakswecanbreakthroughandwherecouldwe
playbarrybondsormarkmagwireanyway" and enable them to raise ticket prices...
JD
|
88.325 | | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Wed Jul 07 1993 11:41 | 4 |
| Bingo on yo' 2nd paragraph there JD
MikeL
|
88.326 | If they don't win, they don't get away with it... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jul 07 1993 12:03 | 17 |
|
I agree with the second paragraph too, but I'd point out that the Red
Sox have generally not been able to get away with the annual ticket
price increases when they don't have sucessful seasons on the field.
When I went in for season tickets in 1988 the day-of-game price of
bleacher tickets that we always bought were $6, and now I'm paying $7
(there did use to be a discount for some advance sales). Between the
bleachers and the grandstand seats you're talking about the majority of
the park where prices have stayed flat. Unless the Red Sox really keep
it up and do much better than finish .500, I expect that there will be
no large increase in the demand for tickets at the current price
(attendance is down slightly this year). I'm not sure how the Bruins
and Celtics have been able to maintain the annual healthy increases,
win, lose, or draw. Smaller but *very* loyal fan base, I suppose...
glenn
|
88.327 | The "Studio Audience" trend in pro sports | AKOCOA::BREEN | Redsox fever? Take 2 aspirin | Wed Jul 07 1993 13:10 | 18 |
| Eddie Adlebrain did have one idea which I agree upon and that is ..
To maintain the high fees paid (at least by network tv, potentially
by cable/pay-per) baseball needs to have ballparks filled with fans and
preferably enthusiastic (spell that LOUD) ones. NBA, NCAA and usually
pro-football (Phoenix is one very serious exception) usually don't have
that problem.
This runs counter to the method by which the owners make their
individual profits: gate receipts (they spend tv revenues on salaries).
Possible result is studio audiences ala boxing where promoters with a
payperview fight with no gate will fill the arena with freebies just to
have the lively crowd as background since the $bucks from gate is a
pittance visavis cable.
Question is whether TV people can convince greedy owners to keep
ticket prices, at least for average and below seats, down to the level
of demand.
|
88.328 | Pennant Fever Grips Hub | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jul 12 1993 10:22 | 1 |
| Best West Coast swing since 1984.
|
88.329 | The rarest of dilemmas--not enough work for all the pitchers | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 12 1993 10:24 | 18 |
|
Red Sox' team ERA is now 3.52. No other AL team is below 4.00! With
Clemens coming back, this could get interesting if the Sox can maintain
even average run support (I have my doubts that this will happen
throughout the second half without at least one acquisition of a solid
bat). Three weeks ago the Sox were 13 back; now they're just 3 back,
2 in the loss column (but still in 5th place, only 3 games above .500).
At that time even if you'd predicted the 15-4 run, you'd (at least I
did) have figured they'd still be 8-10 games back, and headed nowhere.
The Blue Jays' recent collapse is making everyone else very happy
heading into the All-Star break.
It's a good thing no one got too caught up in all that Aaron Sele
hype. Kid looks like he hardly belongs in AAA, much less the big
leagues. Right.
glenn
|
88.330 | trade him to the Indians they need a bullpen | CNTROL::CHILDS | they ought to let em wear dresses | Mon Jul 12 1993 10:40 | 6 |
|
It'll be interesting to see the effect of his Highness on the clubhouse after
the break...If he pitches a couple if stinkers and the team takes the pipe
watch out below!!!!!!!
;^)
|
88.331 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Jul 12 1993 11:35 | 6 |
|
re: last few
what I love/hate about the Red Sox.
The Crazy Met
|
88.332 | What's that, TCM? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 12 1993 11:52 | 5 |
|
> re: last few
>
> what I love/hate about the Red Sox.
|
88.333 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Jul 12 1993 12:16 | 4 |
|
Hope springs eternal and unrealistic expectations all rolled up in one.
The Crazy Met
|
88.334 | Both close and far away at the same time... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 12 1993 12:41 | 16 |
|
> Hope springs eternal and unrealistic expectations all rolled up in one.
Nope (I thought that's what you meant). The Red Sox are a whopping 3
games over .500. The only problem with being a streaky team is that
a 15-4 run is immediately preceded by an even more dramatic 3-16
stretch. I'm only pointing out the facts. The Red Sox are three
games back in what has become a pigpile of mediocrity (which is what
most of baseball has become, excepting the NL West). The pitching has
been terrific, as it has been for the most part since 1990. It would
not be unrealistic for a team that had a couple more consistent hitters
to pull this thing out. However, those extra hitters are at this
moment and until further notice nowhere to be seen.
glenn
|
88.335 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Imus is coming to Boston | Mon Jul 12 1993 18:32 | 4 |
| Hey Craze, at least this beats being mathematically eliminated by
Memorial Day.
/Don
|
88.336 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '93 | Mon Jul 12 1993 21:49 | 5 |
| /er no argument there; of course you completely ignore my point, but
then I expect that of Red Sox fans.
The Crazy Met
|
88.337 | Huh? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Jul 13 1993 10:28 | 14 |
|
> /er no argument there; of course you completely ignore my point, but
> then I expect that of Red Sox fans.
If we could figure out what your point is, then we could proceed to
ignore it. I posted a completely factual and not overly optimistic
synopsis of the Red Sox' current situation, as I have all season long,
for better or worse. Mike Childs followed it up with a prediction
that Roger Clemens would drag the team into the toilet, and the next
thing you know Red Sox fans once again stand accused as mindless
blathering brainwashed idiots.
glenn
|
88.338 | I'll be vacationing.. | CNTROL::CHILDS | they ought to let em wear dresses | Tue Jul 13 1993 10:36 | 10 |
|
Not a prediction Glenn, just a hope.....
;^)
if it happens though you know Kimball and gang will be all over Rog...
not me of course....
mike
|
88.339 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Tue Jul 13 1993 11:44 | 5 |
| Glenn,
See 88.328
The Crazy Met
|
88.341 | 14 th thru the 26 th ;^) | CNTROL::CHILDS | they ought to let em wear dresses | Tue Jul 13 1993 11:59 | 0 |
88.342 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the fun begins....... | Tue Jul 13 1993 13:05 | 6 |
| OK you have heard it here, please send messages to Mike Childs
account while he is on vacation. Mike wants to become the all-time
message receiver while on vacation so he can enter into the Guenniss
book of records.... :-}
REK
|
88.343 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Imus is coming to Boston | Tue Jul 13 1993 13:14 | 6 |
| Craze, you have a "Mets in '93" P-Name and you trash every Sox fan
because of what BigMac said (probably facetiously)? And I'm the one
who doesn't get it? HAHAHAHAHAHAHA� I plan on enjoying this ride for
as long as it lasts.
/Don
|
88.344 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Tue Jul 13 1993 14:16 | 7 |
|
What I claimed applies to the Red Sox more than any other team
I can think of - in fact I'm not sure anything else comes close. Wasn't
even trashing anyone over it, unless stating that what drives my like/distaste
for a team qualifies as trashing.
The Crazy Met
|
88.345 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jul 15 1993 10:28 | 3 |
| I've been trying to modify my RCASO decoder ring to figure out what the
hell TCM is talking about, but haven't had any luck. How about you,
Glenn?
|
88.346 | No decoder ring necessary here... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jul 15 1993 10:49 | 16 |
|
> I've been trying to modify my RCASO decoder ring to figure out what the
> hell TCM is talking about, but haven't had any luck. How about you,
> Glenn?
As /Don so correctly pointed out, TCM took your facetious byline of
"Pennant Fever Grips Hub" as a serious indication that a World
Championship is just around the corner. As anyone who has lived in or
around Boston should know, the phrase "Pennant Fever Grips Hub" is
always used as a sarcastic rejoinder to the latest illusory success of
the Olde Towne Team. That's always the danger with satire. Your
mistake, Mac, was in not including the obligatory references to 1948,
1949, 1974, 1978, etc. ;-)
glenn
|
88.347 | | WREATH::DEVLIN | It's just time to say hor d'oevre... | Thu Jul 15 1993 11:04 | 16 |
| Glenn -
While it may not have 'gripped' the hub - pennant fever - or the thoughts of the
Sox staying in the race are very evident. Even in the checkoutline at
Alexander's the bag boys were talking about hte Sox being 3 games out, with
ROGER about to come back....
While you, (and I), may have serious reservations about jumping for joy about
the Sox latest swing in fortunes, the last few weeks have kindled quite a few
'We can win this thing' fires.
And its natural.
JD
PS: Note for MAC - this is not a criticism. So chill out.
|
88.348 | Parade in October! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jul 15 1993 11:32 | 18 |
|
> While you, (and I), may have serious reservations about jumping for joy about
> the Sox latest swing in fortunes, the last few weeks have kindled quite a few
> 'We can win this thing' fires.
>
> And its natural.
Yes, I agree! There *should be* some excitement heading into the
second half. We shouldn't always be so pessimistic. At least there's
hope. I'm just working to forestall the inevitable friendly bashing
that would come with a pennant race. Sometimes you can't win. If you
get excited, you're a gullible parochial-yokel. If you don't, you're
just another jaded old Red Sox fan. You could probably just not care
until the playoffs start (which *does* happen in some cities), but
that's not being a real baseball fan either. It's a tough battle... ;-)
glenn
|
88.349 | | WREATH::DEVLIN | It's just time to say hor d'oevre... | Thu Jul 15 1993 11:38 | 7 |
| Glenn -
As I've said before (maybe in RED_SOX) is that I fear this 'pennant' race the
Sox find themselves in will keep Lou from making real changes, or I
shudder, trade away a good prospect for anothe Larry Anderson type guy...
JD
|
88.350 | C'mon Lou, git proactive! | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Jul 15 1993 12:10 | 17 |
| glenn and JD,
Agreed agreed. Maybe I'm jaded, but -1 sums up my fear. I am excited
for the Sox and it is fun to be in a pennant race, even it is mainly
through others' ineptitude and fortuitous pitching and timely slugging
by the Sox during this last stretch.
I wish Lou and Harrington had some bollocks and got that extra bat and
glove for the OF. Hail look at the daid wood ( no pun ) they've got
in Q, Calderon, and sometimes Dawson and they're luckily 3 games out.
Thank God for pitching (all this without Aighaid). Why now all lou
will have to say is "
LookatalltherestthatBankheadMelendezandHeskethhavegotten.They'llreallybe
abighelpinthesecondhalf."
MikeL
|
88.351 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Jul 15 1993 12:30 | 4 |
| thanks JD for helping out; I guess being a Red Sox fan for too long addles(sp?)
some folks minds :-)
The Crazy Met
|
88.352 | I mean in a normal year, not a last-place year... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jul 15 1993 13:00 | 9 |
|
> thanks JD for helping out; I guess being a Red Sox fan for too long addles(sp?)
> some folks minds :-)
So what you love/hate about the Red Sox is the natural act of a couple
grocery boys talking pennant race? What do they do in New York? ;-)
glenn
|
88.353 | OK, who's blowin' mo' smoke JD+TCM!!?? 8^) | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Jul 15 1993 15:20 | 8 |
| Nah,
Don't lissen ta JD, glenn. He's a Bosox fan alright, jest cain't
stand the Boston fans. Now just put the Red Sox in New Yuck and he'd
be giddy. As for TCM, he's in denial. Ny-uck media and fans never
go over the edge in touting their teams, never.
MikeL
|
88.354 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Andy Moog > Brian Sutter | Thu Jul 15 1993 15:30 | 9 |
| I'm so excited,
And I just cain't hide it!
I'm about to lose control,
And I think I like it!
Go Sox! What A Team!!
|
88.355 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Jul 15 1993 15:39 | 5 |
| MikeL
What planet did you just land from???? :-)
The Crazy Met
|
88.356 | Same one you been on Craze | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Jul 15 1993 15:55 | 1 |
|
|
88.357 | SI Classic this week features our Sox | AKOCOA::BREEN | Still Sox Bandwagon ticks available | Fri Jul 16 1993 18:06 | 14 |
| SI has a classic edition this week. Our Sox are mentioned thruout as
1/2 dozen writers are asked for their greatest games and 78 playoff,
game 6 are mentioned. Teddy Ballgame is featured in several places.
Rather entertaining issue as a whole. Don't know if that 40s,50s
stuff is interesting to you younger folks except one graphic shows
46-51 and all the pennant races which were decided on last day (nl
49,50) or playoff (nl 46,51;al 48) leaving only 47 with two tight races
and one of the great world series of all time
(lavagetto,gionfriddo,owens-heinrich).
magazine available if anyone interested
b
|
88.358 | The Sox lost, but it was the best... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Jul 16 1993 18:29 | 19 |
|
> SI has a classic edition this week. Our Sox are mentioned thruout as
> 1/2 dozen writers are asked for their greatest games and 78 playoff,
> game 6 are mentioned. Teddy Ballgame is featured in several places.
Yes, an excellent edition from start to finish. The kind of stuff I
could read *every* week (in-depth stuff, not just the same old stories
rehashed as in many nostalgia publications).
The other Red Sox game that was featured as the "best ever" was the
1986 ALCS Game 5. But for what it's worth, of the three listed, I
agree wholeheartedly with Peter Gammons (did he draw the short straw on
this assignment?) that the *losing* effort in the 1978 one-game playoff
with the Yankees was the greatest game of the three. So much on the
line in that one, and tension and twists and turns from start to finish,
not just picking up near the end as in the other two games.
glenn
|
88.359 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '93 | Fri Jul 16 1993 18:55 | 5 |
| Ditto. A marvelous edition on SI. If you don't subscribe and want to
read it send me mail and I'll send it to you.
The Crazy Met
|
88.360 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Mon Jul 19 1993 07:45 | 7 |
|
GREENWELL BEANED!
HEAD XRAYS TAKEN, NOTHING FOUND!
Lee
|
88.361 | | GRANPA::DFAUST | With every wish,there comes a curse | Mon Jul 19 1993 08:50 | 4 |
| Now what Kruk did at the All Star game doesn't look quite so silly.
Dennis Faust
|
88.362 | Great baseball weekend; fire away, TCM... ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 19 1993 10:27 | 30 |
|
Hey, I ran into Steve Diggins (aka Digger) at Fenway Friday night. He
passes along his regards. I informed him that he's a fuddy-duddy, and
he returned my compliment in the genteel spirit that it was offered.
This past weekend was easily the best I've experienced at the ballyard
in a few years, probably since Dwight Evans hit back-to-back game-
winning homers against the Orioles one weekend in 1990. Friday night I
took my daughter down on the spur of the moment (Roger called), I stood
on a street corner begging for a ticket, a guy handed me one for
nothing so I threw my girl over my shoulder and walked in. Lower
grandstand, Section 24, just off home plate on the third-base side!
Roger had his good stuff back; Sox win, Sox win.
Saturday and Sunday were the comeback games, fueled by Seattle mistakes
(by the likes of the near-flawless Omar Vizquel, no less!). More two-out
ugly squib and bloop clutch hits than you can imagine (how long can
this continue?). Yesterday MikeL, his lovely wife and I took in the
classic. Down 6-1 in the 7th, Randy Johnson is cruising right along,
but he's had enough and has to come out. Dawson delivers the two-out
bases-loaded double in the 7th, clearing the sacks with the help of
inexperienced Marc Newfield in left. Three more in the 8th, including
Billy Hatcher's two-out ground single up the middle to win it, 7-6. For
the second straight day heading into the 9th only one run down, after the
third out is recorded in the bottom of the 8th Junior Griffey turns
around and waves farewell to the bleacher crowd, saying it's been fun.
And indeed it was!
glenn
|
88.363 | Woulda liked this winning streak six weeks from now | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Take me for a little while | Mon Jul 19 1993 12:17 | 6 |
| Lou Piniella outmanaged yesterday. 2nd and 3rd, two out, up by a run.
He pitches to Billy Hatcher with Luis Rivera on deck?!?!?!?!?!?!? The
Sox had no one left to pinch-hit, I don't think. Hatcher getrs the
game-winning hit, Rivera strikes out. Sox win, Sox win.
NAZZ
|
88.364 | Lou's ego played a part ?? | AKOCOA::BREEN | Still Sox Bandwagon ticks available | Mon Jul 19 1993 12:32 | 20 |
| Nazz,
I suspect there was a little bit of ego involved here what with
Hatcher formerly playing for Cinci and being traded here - read "not
good enought to play for Lou".
I guess that Piniella was not about to hear "Piniella fears
Hatcher" stuff. I have seen that type of ego thing quite a bit in
sports. In fact there used to be a lot if it right on this team; it's
nice to see Sox benefiting from it.
That is also why, barring injury, Sox must be very careful
tampering with this team. I along with many have cast doubts about
Hatcher's ability to play top centerfield and especially cover for
weaknesses in left and right. But if he is continueing to play this
kind of ball and hit then leave the tinkering to the off-season.
Except for possibly a trade involving right hand pitching for
another lefthander. Mike Tomlin of Pitt would be fine.
b
|
88.365 | Yes, very strange decision-making... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 19 1993 12:38 | 14 |
|
After the game, Piniella said something about Rivera "swinging a good
bat lately". Huh? He had just been activated after spending most of
the season either in the trainer's room or picking splinters out of his
butt. Sure, he'd had one hit in the game, but so what; even Tony
Pena's average isn't .000. Hobson says he would have pinch-hit Mo
Vaughn for Rivera anyway, but from the M's' end I'd still rather have
the Charlton-Vaughn matchup than Charlton-Hatcher. The decision was
pretty much inexplicable, unless Piniella was severely in doubt of
Charlton's ability to throw a strike, and in deference to his player
just couldn't say so.
glenn
|
88.366 | "Dusting(s) and art of avoiding same(lost) | AKOCOA::BREEN | Still Sox Bandwagon ticks available | Mon Jul 19 1993 12:58 | 16 |
| One point on the beaning. I only saw a replay hightlight on espn, no
slo mo. But, Greenwell never left his feet. Not that it would have
avoided the ball but it is (formerly) standard practice to throw the
feet up in the air when the ball comes at the head.
My only point in mentioning this is that with the bean ball
(deliberate) being passe is it possible that avoiding the bean ball has
become a lost art. Only after this incident did it come to me that I
very seldom see batters laying in the dirt these days and most of the
issues and brawls are around balls striking arms and hands.
Baseball has truly come a long way. Yaz was decked twice in '78 at
bat before delivering a cluth hit. And I don't think we need to bring
bat beanballs and "dustings", please, don't get me wrong.
b
|
88.367 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Jul 19 1993 13:00 | 3 |
| Why was Johnson taken out of the game??
The Crazy Met
|
88.368 | | MPGS::MCCARTHY | Mike McCarthy SHR1-4/E13 237-2468 | Mon Jul 19 1993 14:28 | 3 |
| The Globe said that Johnson's arm and back stiffened.
Mike
|
88.369 | | CAMONE::WAY | RIP #28 | Tue Jul 20 1993 11:10 | 9 |
| From the replay I saw, Greenwell didn't have a chance to get down. That
was like a laser shot.
Pitching inside is a lost art.
Was nice to see Mike come back and hit a triple first time up lasted night....
'Saw
|
88.370 | Lost are of the "flip" | AKOCOA::BREEN | Still Sox Bandwagon ticks available | Tue Jul 20 1993 11:47 | 20 |
| I read after posting that bleacher background made it very difficult to
see.
But what is a lost art is flipping those legs up to bring the head
down.
Of course what is mindbending is the stories of maglie and others, to
compensate for the mastery of the above art used to avoid beanings,
started pitching behind the head and down so that the batter using the
flip technique would have his head move down and into the ball.
Mays in turn perfected the ability to spot that type of beanball and
simply not move at all.
This was not, and I don't blame anyone for not believing me, simply an
attempt to control the inside of the plate as Clemons does today, but
premeditated attempt to murder. Those pitchers were trying to hit the
aaron's,robinsons and mays' in the head to get them out of there.
b
|
88.371 | Go Sox! | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Wed Jul 21 1993 16:23 | 5 |
| So who's pitchin' for us tonight? Who are we playing? Will we make it
21/26???
- ACC Chris
|
88.372 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Lindsey and Melanie have a new house... | Wed Jul 21 1993 16:26 | 4 |
| The Sox have about the same chance of winning the WS this year as Kev
Farley does of dunking over Shaq.
=Bob=
|
88.373 | Final update in a moment | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jul 21 1993 16:36 | 11 |
|
> So who's pitchin' for us tonight? Who are we playing? Will we make it
> 21/26???
The game's almost over. Sox up 4-1 in the bottom of the eighth.
Clemens 8 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 7 K; only three hits after the
first. Still the best; let's hope Mike Childs stays on vacation for a
while longer...
glenn
|
88.374 | 21 of 26, parade in October! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jul 21 1993 16:45 | 7 |
|
It's over, Sox win 4-1; Russell closes it out 1-2-3 in the ninth.
Orioles losing by one in the 8th; Yankees losing by five in the 8th;
Tigers losing by five in the 6th.
glenn
|
88.375 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Jul 21 1993 16:47 | 4 |
| Sox would be 1/2 game out if all those scores remained as is and Jays lost
today??
The Crazy Met
|
88.376 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | Fresh off a week of I & I | Wed Jul 21 1993 16:48 | 9 |
|
>>Pitching inside is a lost art.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
What's so lost about it. Lots of guys pitch good in the Astrodome, the
Kingdome, the Skydome, etc.
JaKe
|
88.377 | Rocket Roger | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Wed Jul 21 1993 16:48 | 9 |
| > Sox 1/2 game out
See what happens when I climb aboard the bandwagon?
BTW, if anybody heads Atlanta-way lemme know, cause I_gots season tix
myself to the Bravo's.
- ACC Chris
|
88.378 | Clemens now up to 9-6, 161-78 (.674 > Smif's tourney pct.) lifetime! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jul 21 1993 16:59 | 10 |
|
> BTW, if anybody heads Atlanta-way lemme know, cause I_gots season tix
> myself to the Bravo's.
You didn't get burned out? Good to see that if it had to happen it was
in the LUXURY BOXES (no one hurt, of course, thank god). Now if someone
can blow that infernal Fenway 600 Club to kingdom come...
glenn
|
88.379 | Yo TCM... Pennant fevah grips Hub! | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Wed Jul 21 1993 17:15 | 11 |
| Alright!!
Go Sox! Enjoy it for all its worth gang.. jeez, one month ago
I figured they'd double that 13 out and be 26 out at the end. Go
figure.
Yo glenn! What's your record this year fer games attended?
I's 2-0!
MikeL
|
88.380 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | Fresh off a week of I & I | Wed Jul 21 1993 17:17 | 13 |
|
>>You didn't get burned out? Good to see that if it had to happen it was
>>in the LUXURY BOXES (no one hurt, of course, thank god). Now if someone
Twas probably some Execs pulled the curtain to block the light from
coming in, and then had a fart lighting contest and set the curtain
ablaze that got the fire going in Atlanta.
Schnortt Schitt Schlepps
JaKe
|
88.381 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jul 21 1993 17:20 | 8 |
|
> Yo glenn! What's your record this year fer games attended?
13-4. They're actually 14-2 on the weekend plan; I missed a couple.
They're making up for last year's abysmal weekend home record...
glenn
|
88.382 | Orioles loose; Sox 1/2 back pending Toronto game... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jul 21 1993 18:36 | 1 |
|
|
88.383 | I'm enjoying baseball agin! | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Wed Jul 21 1993 22:05 | 13 |
| glenn,
how's the rest of the ALEast contenders' pitching corps stack up agin
the Bosox? I know everyone says that the Red Sox have the best, but
cain you provide a_analysis of the contendahs, time permitting?
Methinks Toronto is in o-so shape start-wise with Key and Cone gone
coupled with the fact that Morris and Stewart( hopefully) are over the
hill. I like the Yanks starters even if Abbott is underachieving.
Who the O's got besides Musina that is good?
Thanks,
MikeL
|
88.384 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Jul 22 1993 09:20 | 7 |
|
The Sox are front page news in today's Globe. Folks are gushing
over them over in the RED_SOX conference. Every radio and tv station
is talking "Pennant Fever Grips Hub!". Personally, I still ain't
convinced that there won't be a Pope Roscoe before there'll be
a World Series championship flag in Boston.
|
88.385 | 4@ x-43 | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Thu Jul 22 1993 09:39 | 11 |
|
Jest to toss a few more twigs into this bonfire, I understand that the
top 4 teams in the division all have the same amount of losses - 43.
So's I suppose ack-ack cain now start spewing forth some 'trons about
how the Sox are really in 1st place too!
I remain,
smart in the ways of dastistical twisting!
Kev
|
88.386 | Pope Roscoe??!! HAHAHA you slayeth moi | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Jul 22 1993 09:41 | 17 |
| Well Thomas,
I'm enjoying it while I can also.. Not to sound like Dr. Doom, but
realistically, I don't believe they'll be up there in the end.
I think all the players are playing their hearts out and over their
heads (pitchers excepting). Their outfield has less range than Amana
and their infield defense won't bedazzle ya, but they're making it
exciting. If they're gonna stay in it, then their pitching will have
to remain stellar.
But I'm on the bandwagon, so GO SOX! ( and please make a trade fer
Ricky Henderson, Shane Mack, or maybe Rob Deer)
MikeL
|
88.387 | Explanations? I don't have one... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jul 22 1993 10:20 | 15 |
|
Of course they won't win it all. I'm at a total loss to explain how
it's possible for this bunch to win 21 of 26 in *any* stretch, though.
You don't see many of those from anyone, especially mediocre teams.
How did it happen? What does it mean?
I hope that Toronto continues to go with Jack "Stick a Fork in Me"
Morris, though. He did get hurt last night and had to come out, and
the Jays won. Please get well soon, Jack! If the Jays ever figure out
that Morris really is through and decide to bring up a talented young
starter by the name of Paul Spoljaric, it could be over. No way could
he (or anyone else) be worse than Morris.
glenn
|
88.388 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Jul 22 1993 10:33 | 8 |
|
I don't mean to be a wet blanket [I just can't help it, though] but
haven't we (Sox fans) been down this road before. A *few* times. If
they make the LCS, sure I'll be excited but July is just a bit early
to start making comparisons to '67 and '75. Enjoy it while it lasts
but realize that it may not last all that long and the little bit of
excitement that they've given us so far is more than was expected not
all that long ago.
|
88.389 | | WREATH::DEVLIN | Think before wearing spandex... | Thu Jul 22 1993 10:33 | 11 |
| Tommy -
I'm glad you put that note in. If I had, Mac woulda been all over me!
JD
PS: Knorr has season ticks to the Braves? Wonder how long he's been
a real Braves fan? Well, let me think back to that DECUS game and
how big a baseball fan Chrissy was....and now the Sox are 'his' team...
How disgusting.
|
88.390 | Basketball on the other hand should play year round | MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS | | Thu Jul 22 1993 10:49 | 14 |
| There Division seems to be very tight, with most of the division above
.500 ??? Is this division that good ? How do people rate the division
in baseball. Is the National League better then the American League.
Lets get a rathole going :-)
Even if the sox's dont take 1st place at least they giving all you
bball fans something to watch, if they had lost the last 21 of 26
there seasone would be basically over and no one would be going to
games etc, I dont watch much BBall I usally get to 2 or 3 games a
year and watch the Off's if they make it. Hockey and BBall have
too many games to try and watch the entire season, you could watch
2 Baseball games a night....
MairB
|
88.391 | No reason to wait; this is *it* | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jul 22 1993 10:49 | 18 |
|
> I'm glad you put that note in. If I had, Mac woulda been all over me!
Oh, I'm sure you would have managed to embellish it a bit more to
directly antagonize *someone*, if not the entire city, state, and
region, JD. ;-)
Tommy's sentiments are not far out of line with my own, with one
possible exception. I enjoy these mid-to-late-summer battles *more*
than the League Championship Series. I see no reason to wait to be
"excited" (for the lack of a better word). It's not a matter of being
led down a path only to be let down. I couldn't care less about that;
it's part of the package. To me, playing an important ballgame *every
day* is the entire appeal. Granted, it could be over in two weeks, but
that's also part of the deal...
glenn
|
88.392 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Jul 22 1993 11:18 | 13 |
|
>> I enjoy these mid-to-late-summer battles *more* than the League
>> Championship Series. I see no reason to wait to be "excited" (for
>> the lack of a better word).
A late season series against the Yankees with both teams contending
is about as exciting as sports get around these here parts. Every bit
as charged as the Celtics-Lakers series of the '80's and maybe even
a little more so because of the place that the Sox hold in the hearts
of New Englanders. BUT it will take the Sox making the LCS for me to
be suckered into believing that they might actually win it all this
year.
|
88.393 | *Nothing* like NewEnglanders when Sox are in the race! | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Thu Jul 22 1993 11:41 | 13 |
| > BUT it will take the Sox making the LCS for me to be suckered into
> believing that they might actually win it all this year.
There's not a NewEnglander alive who will *EVER* be suckered into
believing the Sox might actually win it all, regardless of who's on the
team.
There's never, EVER been a team (pick your sport) to take its fans to
such emotional lengths only to let 'em down at the end. The resulting
skepticism is woven into the fabric of every true New Englander.
- ACC Chris
|
88.394 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Thu Jul 22 1993 12:17 | 4 |
| If the Sox stay in contention over the next month and a half, we'll
be seeing this note hit .1000! And, probably from a new noter, too.
Lee
|
88.395 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Jul 22 1993 12:33 | 11 |
| fun, fun, fun.
Tommy I want to add to JD's thanks for putting that note in.
re: a different Tommy note
Good to see you are finally back in the swing of things. Just an fyi
that if needed I can and will start putting in notes that folks might
really be offended by.
The Crazy Met
|
88.396 | Somethin's goin' on... | RAAJI::MORGAN | | Thu Jul 22 1993 12:34 | 15 |
| What is making this pennant race so exciting is the fact that NOBODY
picked the Red Sox to be anywhere near the top. That's why I have
absolutely no problem swallowing the bait, as they say, to cheer these
guys on. They're not expected to do it, so the past month has been an
early Christmas gift to the baseball fans of New England. Even my 4
year old daughter, who up until now had found the game to be a total
bore, practically wet herself the other night when I told her Roger
Clemens was pitching.
For anyone that's watched most or all of the Sox games to date, it's
apparent that this is one of those years where everything is going their
way. Ride the wave while it lasts. It don't get much better than
this.
Steve
|
88.397 | What's wrong with this picture? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jul 22 1993 12:38 | 7 |
|
Tommy, why are all these New Yorkers thanking you for your notes?
What's the story here? You've pretty much stated the obvious about the
Red Sox and these Mets fans appear overwhelmed by da Troof...
glenn
|
88.398 | Sox fan for 28 years | AD::HEATH | The jinx is broken, Sox '93 Champs | Fri Jul 23 1993 10:34 | 13 |
|
I have been a Sox fan since birth and have been on the emotional
roller coaster many times. I too thought the sox would be about 10
games out by now but I would still be tunning in to watch Butch get
out mananged night after night. While still no Butch Hobson fan, I
think he is starting to learn how to manage and it seems to be paying
off. Say what you want, mediocore division, luck, a few guys playing
way above themselves, I don't care, the Sox are in a pennant race and
it don't get any better than this. I will ride this untill the end and
not embarressed to say I'm a Sox fan, never have been never will.
Jerry
|
88.399 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Jul 23 1993 10:50 | 6 |
| � But I'm on the bandwagon, so GO SOX! ( and please make a trade fer
� Ricky Henderson,
Nah, it'll disrupt the clubhouse chemistry. Danny Darwin will start
throwing hamburger buns at him whenever he shows up at the post game
spread.
|
88.400 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Jul 23 1993 10:58 | 3 |
| hey tommy, stop rainin' on my parade.
JD, phtttttthhhhhhppppptttttt When ya leavin?
|
88.401 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the fun begins....... | Fri Jul 23 1993 10:59 | 13 |
| Thats right, keep on thinking the Red S*cks are going all the way.
Lou is Moses and Hobson is Jesus... Jump on the bandwagon...
1967 all over again...
When (no if) the bandwagon hits a Bluejay and crashes and burns try
not to trample the people in front of you jumpimg off the B_W...
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!tm
REK
PS I'm betting on a Yankee-Bluejay battle in September...
|
88.402 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Jul 23 1993 11:00 | 5 |
| �Good to see you are finally back in the swing of things. Just an fyi
�that if needed I can and will start putting in notes that folks might
�really be offended by.
Thanks, TCM. I always know I can count on you.
|
88.403 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Jul 23 1993 11:30 | 7 |
| �Good to see you are finally back in the swing of things. Just an fyi
�that if needed I can and will start putting in notes that folks might
�really be offended by.
TCM, what the hell did you mean by this anyways?
|
88.404 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Fri Jul 23 1993 11:37 | 10 |
| �Good to see you are finally back in the swing of things. Just an fyi
�that if needed I can and will start putting in notes that folks might
�really be offended by.
> Thanks, TCM. I always know I can count on you.
Your welcome, Mac. Just want to keep you from getting bored :-)
The Crazy Met
|
88.405 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Jul 23 1993 12:53 | 9 |
| � What is making this pennant race so exciting is the fact that NOBODY
� picked the Red Sox to be anywhere near the top.
Oh great, now JD is going to go on and on about media hyped, phony
overachiever tag being layed on the Red Sox. He'll point to how Lou
Gorman has been saying all along how much this club was improved over
the winter. That is was just the Boston media who claimed these guys
couldn't do it just so they could write all those stories later in the
year about how they are playing above their heads.
|
88.406 | Red Sox's are playing with heart | MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS | | Fri Jul 23 1993 14:57 | 9 |
| I dont think the blue jays can do it again, oh wait do they
still have the Largest damn payroll in baseball, who knows maybe
Money can buy ya 2 championships... :-)
Toronto Blue Jays the Best Team Money can Buy.
MaB
even a non Baseball Regular like myself's knows
high paid talant when he see's it :-)
|
88.407 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '93 | Mon Jul 26 1993 01:39 | 21 |
|
If baseball can keep the focus on the race in the AL East instead of on
players salaries, lockouts, strikes, they will have a great tale to
tell this season. Despite the fact that I hope the Yankees do not win
the division, that I am very ambivalent about the Red Sox, and like the
Jays but don't have a real rooting interest it is great to have a
pennant race like this. Toss in Baltimore and Detroit who are not that
far back and it makes this race worth following even when the only
rooting interest is negative - that is who does not win the division.
None of the 3 teams tied for first are as bad as they have looked when
going through losing streaks, nor as good as they look when they win 10
straight or come back from 8-0 deficits to win. An injury to a key
player could be the difference, a slump at the wrong part of the
schedule or winning streak just at the right time could make the
difference. This is the kind of race that just can't happen in football
because the season is so short. 2 months of 3-5 teams fighting it out
is one of the things baseball does better than any other sport.
The Crazy Met
|
88.408 | ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Mon Jul 26 1993 09:36 | 13 |
|
TEN IN A ROW!!!!!!!!
In FIRSTED PLACE!!!!!
MY ALL-TIME FAVORITE TEAM!!!!!!
PARADE IN OCTOBER!!!!!!
I remain,
Kev_for_ACChris!
|
88.409 | There may even be hope in the NL West now, courtesy of McGrif | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 26 1993 10:20 | 11 |
|
Well said, TCM. Myself, I'm hoping for at least three races going right
down to the wire, resulting in one or two divisional ties and 1-game
playoffs after 162 games have been played. That might cause the barons
to re-think their silly little playoff plan. As I heard on the radio
this morning, baseball parks all over the country have been jammed to
overfull in the past couple weeks, and interest in these races likely
hasn't peaked yet...
glenn
|
88.410 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Jul 26 1993 10:30 | 10 |
| For the moment there are 3, Phillies lead is down to 4. Problem
in NL West is Giants and Bonds have to go through a serious slump.
Atlanta needs help from other teams. McGriff might not be enough - though he
has certainly had a very quick impact.
The Crazy Met
ps - forget about the owners rethinking their playoff plans.
Even a classic rivalry (Red Sox - Yankees) won't make them change their
minds. sigh :-(
|
88.411 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jul 26 1993 10:35 | 3 |
| With the AL West looking like it will only take a team with a .500
record to win it, I think the owners will be able to use this season's
finish to justify the new playoff system.
|
88.412 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Jul 26 1993 10:48 | 4 |
| How Mac?? The owners plan has the 2 second place teams getting in
to the playoffs, NOT the 2 non-division winners with the best records/
The Crazy Met
|
88.413 | Packed ballparks in September would at least give pause | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 26 1993 11:05 | 21 |
|
> With the AL West looking like it will only take a team with a .500
> record to win it, I think the owners will be able to use this season's
> finish to justify the new playoff system.
Mac, you're obviously confusing what might make sense or what might be
just and right with where the money is (which happen to be in opposite
camps on this issue). If the money comes flowing in even in September
due to some hotly-contested multi-team pennant races, that's the one
thing (in combination with a growing fan and media backlash) that could
give the owners pause on their plan. It's been argued that the 4-team
league playoff increases interest when there are no pennant races, but
when you've got so many teams with a legitimate shot I believe that
regular-season interest is held highest when there's only payoff per
division. I might be dreaming that in the year before the plan is to
go in effect that an absolutely optimal scenario to work against it
comes about that forestalls its adoption, but that's what I'm hoping
happens nonetheless.
glenn
|
88.414 | | MKFSB::LONG | Life's a dance, you learn as you go | Mon Jul 26 1993 11:19 | 7 |
| >>For the moment there are 3, Phillies lead is down to 4. Problem
>>in NL West is Giants and Bonds have to go through a serious slump.
never fear, October is right around the corner.
billl
|
88.415 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jul 26 1993 11:37 | 6 |
| �How Mac?? The owners plan has the 2 second place teams getting in
�to the playoffs, NOT the 2 non-division winners with the best records/
From what I've read, that still hasn't been decided. Even with the 2
second place teams getting in, that means that 2 of the teams with the
best record still get in.
|
88.416 | we'll know soon enough :-( | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Jul 26 1993 11:41 | 4 |
| From what I read it was pretty much decided it would be the 2 second place
teams.
The Crazy Met
|
88.417 | I hope they can keep it going... | MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS | | Mon Jul 26 1993 11:44 | 15 |
| Can they continue on the road, I heard this morning the sox's start a
13 or 14 game road trip.. ?? Who do they play on this stretch. Could
be a real sign of what there made of. Still great to see and hear all
the support. But this is NE and these are the sox's and we know how
quick things will change when they start losing (If the start losing).
I hope the hand in there... Id have to say that at this point they
still have to be considered and underdog to win it all, and I love
rooting for an underdog, especially from boston :-)
I hope all you Sox's fans are enjoying it and i hope it continues thru
the rest of the season. Im still not watching any games on TV but Im
planning on a couple of trips to the ballpark in late august or early
september... Best of luck on the road trip...
mab
|
88.418 | | CAM3::WAY | RIP #28 | Mon Jul 26 1993 12:00 | 28 |
| > Can they continue on the road, I heard this morning the sox's start a
> 13 or 14 game road trip.. ?? Who do they play on this stretch. Could
> be a real sign of what there made of.
Mil (4)
Bal (3)
-off-
Min (3)
Det (3)
-off-
Home for NY 8/10
That's what my schedule says.
> I hope all you Sox's fans are enjoying it and i hope it continues thru
> the rest of the season. Im still not watching any games on TV but Im
> planning on a couple of trips to the ballpark in late august or early
> september... Best of luck on the road trip...
Thanks.... It's enjoyable now, and why not enjoy it, they're playing
good ball, and that's ALWAYS enjoyable.....
'Saw
|
88.419 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Jul 26 1993 12:08 | 12 |
|
I seriously doubt that the owners are going to reconsider the new
playoff structure no matter what happens in the pennant races. The
reason for the changes is still the same - money. Until they're con-
vinced that they can make more money with the current structure than
with an expanded playoffs they'll go with the expanded. It's pretty
sad too because this year may be the last of the great Yankee-Red Sox
pennant races. Sure at some point in the future tese two teams may be
battling it out for a final playoff spot but somehow it won't be quite
the same as "THE PENNANT". Who knows baseball may have to come up with
a bunch of those convoluted tie breakers like football has to determine
the wild card teams. Won't that be just great?
|
88.420 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jul 26 1993 12:16 | 7 |
| �Sure at some point in the future tese two teams may be
� battling it out for a final playoff spot but somehow it won't be quite
� the same as "THE PENNANT".
The Sox and the Yankees have not battled for "THE PENNANT" since the
late 60's. They've battled for the AL East title since then, but not
"THE PENNANT".
|
88.421 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Jul 26 1993 12:23 | 2 |
|
That's what I meant, Mr Galldang-know-it-all.
|
88.422 | The thrill is back... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 26 1993 12:32 | 26 |
|
Maybe the owners are just setting us up with this system to be
instituted for 1994. By contrast, the proposed follow-on realignment
into three divisions with a single wildcard spot for 1995 and beyond
looks a whole lot better from my vantage point than it did before this
interim system was devised. It'll undoubtedly be Boston, New York,
Baltimore, and Toronto in one super-division, but some of the others
might be slightly less interesting from a fan perspective. Detroit,
Milwaukee and possibly Cleveland (which would probably stay in the
East, actually) won't be thrilled with moving into a Central Division
and losing those traditional rivals, I'm sure.
I was at the Sox games on Saturday and Sunday and that place is
positively *electric* at this point. I wish I had been there Friday
night for what has to have been the most exciting game of the season to
date. I stuck around too long for too many beers at the Ground Round
but it was worth it to see Greenie's line shot home run off Eckersley
and then Zupcic's game-winner on the big screen in the presence of a
bar crowd that had become increasingly more interested as the night
wore on (was it just Denny, Slash and I there at that point?). I just
hope the feeling's still there when they come back from this 13-game
road trip-- I'm conveniently headed for my dad's place in DC this
weekend to lend my support for the games in Baltimore!
glenn
|
88.423 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jul 26 1993 12:36 | 8 |
| � I was at the Sox games on Saturday and Sunday and that place is
� positively *electric* at this point.
I think I saw your smiling face on TV38 right after Mo's shot to the
bullpen.
What the heck was LaRussa thinking of walking Dawson to load the bases
for Mo anyway?
|
88.424 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Jul 26 1993 12:38 | 6 |
| Tommy, do I understand correctly from .419 that you think there
are things about baseball that are better than footbal??
I remain astounded and amazed,
The Crazy Met
|
88.425 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Jul 26 1993 13:14 | 13 |
|
>> Tommy, do I understand correctly from .419 that you think there
>> are things about baseball that are better than footbal??
I never said baseball was completely bad. And to be fair the one
team per division rule just wouldn't be fair in football because
they play so few games. However, there are other things in baseball
that are better than football. The stadiums for one. The timeless
feel of being at a ballpark like Fenway. And although this is purely
subjective on my part, I think by and large, the fans at your average
baseball game have a greater understanding of both the nuance and
history of their game than football fans do of their's.
|
88.426 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jul 26 1993 14:32 | 3 |
| Roger Clemens was nominated for the 1993 Roberto Clemente award. This
award is given for on and off the field activities. Apparently Clemens
is quite active in charity work.
|
88.427 | keeping fingers crossed | FRETZ::HEISER | light without heat | Mon Jul 26 1993 15:30 | 1 |
| Let's just hope they don't lose 10 in a row in August or September.
|
88.428 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Jul 26 1993 16:52 | 12 |
|
Damn near every player that was interviewed after yesterday's game
alluded to the closeness and chemistry of the team. Weren't nobody
talking like that when Mr MemyselfandI, Wade Boggs, was in town.
Except, of course, for old Wade himself but that was as transparent
as his post-Margo "Lord willing..." and "The Lord works in mysterious
ways" crap. Frank Viola even went so far as to compare this team to
the '87 Twin which he said wasn't the most talented team in baseball
but were a tight team and played together every night and got it done.
Granted, everybody's usually happy on a winning club and in these cases
cause and effect are hard to determine. But it's my belief that you just
can't underestimate what getting rid of one jerk can do for your ballclub.
|
88.429 | chemistry, shemistry | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jul 26 1993 16:56 | 6 |
| The only reason the Sox aren't missing Wade Boggs is because Cooper has
filled the void nicely and they have other guys getting on base for a
change.
And I see that things are miserable on that other first place team in
da Bronx.
|
88.430 | Reality or rationalization? I sure hope the former... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 26 1993 16:59 | 13 |
|
> But it's my belief that you just
> can't underestimate what getting rid of one jerk can do for your
> ballclub.
'Course as you alluded to they said the same stuff when they were
winning in 1986, 1988, and 1990. And then there's the small matter of
being tied for first with the Yankees, where the Yank are all talking
"new attitude", too. But gawd, yes, I hope it really and truly is
different this time 'round in the results...
glenn
|
88.432 | Now you've gone and insulted Yankee fans! ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 26 1993 17:23 | 12 |
|
> Wade's gone. He's not missed. Them's facts.
No one has really claimed otherwise, in the literal sense. I've said
that Wade would be "missed" in the sense that I appreciated his talent
and accomplishments over the years, regardless of the outlandish things
he'd say and do, but that at this stage in his career and for the money
that he was demanding it didn't make sense to retain him. More than a
subtle difference...
glenn
|
88.434 | ouch | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '93 | Tue Jul 27 1993 00:15 | 18 |
| Tough loss for the Red Sox. 3-2 on a 2 run HR with 2 out in the bottom
of the 9th. HR off of Russell. It will be fascinating to see how this
type of loss affects them. It reminded me of a similar kind of loss in
September of 1991 to the Yankees where Reardon gave up a game tying HR
to Roberto Kelly (I think) with 2 out in the 9th; Yankees won in 10 or
11 beating Matt Young. Sox could have tied for first with a win since
Jays played that evening; Sox never did get into first. Of course that
was much later in the season but it will be interesting to watch.
Other teams that made runs and then lost a game in the 9th never
regained their momentum (Pendleton off McDowell in 1987 in September,
Randolph against the Mets in August of 1989 come to mind, there are
others).
Yankees also lost. Jays move into first by not playing.
The Crazy Met
|
88.435 | I wasn't happy about it, but it's way too early to dwell on | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Jul 27 1993 10:36 | 16 |
|
> Of course that
> was much later in the season but it will be interesting to watch.
That's the main difference right there. It's way too early for one tough
loss to affect the progress of the remaining 63 games, but if the Red
Sox suffer a poor road trip, look for far too much to be made of this
Brunansky home run nonetheless (many were pointing to a mediocre 7-6
trip as more than acceptable even before last night, just as a matter
of the law of averages coinciding with the longest trip of the year).
Even the Kelly homer, which was damaging to be sure, still mostly
served as a symbolic placemarker for an overused bullpen that quickly
and not unexpectedly fell apart down the stretch.
glenn
|
88.436 | 7-6 roadtrip on horizon? | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Tue Jul 27 1993 11:09 | 39 |
| Ah, one that got away...
Couple observations..
* There are certain people that shouldn't be allowed to wear stretch
unis. Roger Clemens and Mo Vaughn come to mind. Those dang unis
make these two look like they're soon to audition for FatBoys II.
* Mo certainly continues to tattoo lefties, don't he. Mike Easler
has done the job with the HitDog.
* Speakin' of Easler, looks like it's time to rip Tony Pena a new
rectum. Ol .189 is upo there swinging from the heels against
the off-speed offerings of Novoa. If any man looked as weak as
Antanacio does, I'd like to know whom. Ever hear of *trying*
to hit to right Tony??
* Speakin' of Pena, nice pitch call on old friend Bruno. The man
can't hit the cheese, but hits a weak slider. Boom! Russell
says in the paper that he hesitated when Tony called for it.
Wail, dummy, step off and shake hin off! Oh well, cain't win
'em all.
* Somebody tell Fletcher to *git* that dang lead man. Minor nit 8^)
* Ya gots to like Tony Fossas. Anyone who looks as much in shape as
yo' average DEC softball player is OK by me.
* Don't git me wrong, I like Billy Hatcher, but Bip Roberts or Shane
Mack would look great in CF. Hatcher gives it his all, but he don't
have the range to be an *everyday* CF. Put him in right and keep
Andre's knees safe as DH. Billy shoulda had that 2B by Surhoff.
Sox will bounce back tho.. Lou, make that trade for a CF!! And make
Tony git in that cage with Easler!
MikeL
|
88.437 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Jul 27 1993 12:29 | 3 |
| Tommy, you're beginning to remind me of the woman who sat in front of
me at Fenway druing Wades' first game back as a Yankee. She said it is
going to be a real shame to see Wade inducted into the Hall of Fame.
|
88.439 | too bad Tommy, she only dates virgins! ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Tue Jul 27 1993 12:54 | 1 |
|
|
88.440 | | CAM3::WAY | I'd walk the wire for you | Tue Jul 27 1993 14:11 | 4 |
| Hey, that lady sounds like okay people to me.
'saw
|
88.441 | Beantown's best copy "life with Roger" | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Mon Aug 02 1993 08:44 | 11 |
|
Some team player that Roger's turning out to be. Keeping the young pups up
till 6 am in the morning after a night game with a day game to follow. Shame
on you Rog....
Is Rog a snow freak or something? I mean 30 year old men usually don't stay
up all night without some kind of aid......
"Bob Barker ain't got anything on me..." ane then he gets bit...too much
mike
|
88.443 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Mon Aug 02 1993 10:18 | 11 |
| <<< Note 88.442 by SHARE::DERRY "Color me impressed..." >>>
-< Danny gets 10 before Rog >-
> 6 a.m... early tee time?
> He's such a nice guy.... trying to save a little dog. He's just
> incredible. Admit it, Mikey. Maybe he should get some kind of award.
You mean he shilling for the Roberto Clemete Award????
mike
|
88.444 | I can still pull an All nighter | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Aug 02 1993 10:57 | 12 |
| � Some team player that Roger's turning out to be. Keeping the young pups up
� till 6 am in the morning after a night game with a day game to follow. Shame
� on you Rog....
Hadn't heard that one.
� Is Rog a snow freak or something? I mean 30 year old men usually don't stay
� up all night without some kind of aid......
Just because you're older than your years...
|
88.445 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is one year old!!! | Mon Aug 02 1993 11:42 | 3 |
| � I can still pull an All nighter
Now THERE'S something I would be proud of...
|
88.446 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Aug 02 1993 12:13 | 1 |
| Bob, as a parent of a youngster I'm sure you can too.
|
88.447 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is one year old!!! | Mon Aug 02 1993 12:19 | 6 |
| � Bob, as a parent of a youngster I'm sure you can too.
Yea, but being thrown up on, and administering liquid Tylenol ain't quite
the same as when I was popping open my 18th can of Bud as the sun was coming up,
and then going to some greasy spoon diner for "breakfast".
|
88.448 | | CAM3::WAY | The thrill of the grass... | Mon Aug 02 1993 12:42 | 13 |
| >Yea, but being thrown up on, and administering liquid Tylenol ain't quite
>the same as when I was popping open my 18th can of Bud as the sun was coming up,
>and then going to some greasy spoon diner for "breakfast".
It's all relative. After 18 Buds and a greasy spoon breakfast, I'm sure
that there had to be someone you hurled on, and got your liquid Tylenol
from 8^) 8^) 8^)
'Saw
|
88.449 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | YouAin'tPlayingWakeForestAnymore! | Mon Aug 02 1993 13:41 | 10 |
| Admit it Mike, Roger qualifies for sainthood after this latest
episode. Imagine risking that million dollar pitching hand to save a
wounded dog he found in the street. Damn, I'm getting all misty-eyed just
thinking about it... What a guy! Quite frankly any member of this Sox
team probably would've done the same thing. They're just a bunch of 9-5
guys carrying thier lunchpails to the ballpark every day. Just a bunch of
scrapping, digging, overachieving, dog-saving swell fellows. Damn, if I
ain't getting a stiffie just thinking about these 25 Rocky Balboas!
/Don
|
88.450 | | RAAJI::MORGAN | You were good, Reg... | Mon Aug 02 1993 13:59 | 3 |
| Almost as good as JD's, Knicks note there Slasher!
Steve
|
88.451 | | QUASER::JACKSONTA | Yes,Calgon took her away! | Mon Aug 02 1993 14:17 | 1 |
| Just to think that I WAS hungry a minute ago. Anyone got some Pepto?
|
88.452 | We've got the animal kingdom behind us, thanks to Roger... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 02 1993 15:43 | 9 |
|
Hey, after spending this weekend at beautiful Camden Yards, where my
Red Sox took two of three in front of thousands of disappointed
Baltimoreans (and more than a few Red Sox fans), my de-programming is
complete. What a group of guys! What humanitarians! What battlers!
What a team! All the way in '93!
glenn
|
88.453 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Get a haircut & get a real job | Mon Aug 02 1993 16:04 | 2 |
| But is Fenway still better than Camden?
|
88.454 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | YouAin'tPlayingWakeForestAnymore! | Mon Aug 02 1993 16:08 | 3 |
| Betcha he say no. Walte. Did Denny and I steer ya wrong Glenn?
/Don
|
88.455 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | YouAin'tPlayingWakeForestAnymore! | Mon Aug 02 1993 16:12 | 9 |
| � -< We've got the animal kingdom behind us, thanks to Roger... >-
You know Glenn, I was thinking that guys like LaRussa may have bake
sales and wear t-shirts for AnimalRightsOverHumanRights causes, but our man
Roger (being a man of action and not words) kind of puts things in
perspective with his heroic actions on Sunday morning. Gives me goose
bumps all over...
/Don
|
88.456 | Passes the test for me: great place to watch baseball | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 02 1993 16:22 | 28 |
|
> But is Fenway still better than Camden?
No, it's not. But I still can't pick one over the other, because the
appeal of each is different, as different as the times in which they
were built. They both have one thing in common, though, in the most
important department (for me): mostly good seats very close to the
field, with good sightlines (right field is the exception in both
parks). When the time comes, I certainly would not mind Fenway Park
being replaced with a Camden Yards. I didn't need to see Camden Yards
to know that, though.
I will say this, though: while Camden Yards is a great park to *watch
baseball* (the primary function of a baseball park, after all), it seems
as if this is lost on literally thousands in attendance who spend
little time actually watching the game, instead milling around the park,
taking in the sights, shopping on Eutaw Street, etc. I understand that
many of these folks are tourists seeing the park for the first time,
and it is a rather amazing spectacle. But no way do I miss the kind of
good baseball that was on display this weekend so that I can stand in
line for 45 minutes at Boog Powell's BBQ pit (not when you can get
through Tom Matte's in 10! ;-). I suspect that in time much of this
romantic, somewhat sappy appeal to the traditional aspects of the game
will recede and the park itself will become a classic for what it was
built for, which is for baseball being played in the here and now.
glenn
|
88.457 | Wade was that really you? | AKOCOA::BREEN | Hello Warner, about that NESN subscription | Tue Aug 03 1993 12:30 | 7 |
| Was that really Wade, Lead Drawers, Boggs running from first to third
on a single last night. And then trying to score on a sac. fly(in
vain) using a quite acceptable fadeaway slide.
And looking like he really cared.
b
|
88.458 | | CAM3::WAY | The thrill of the grass... | Tue Aug 03 1993 14:02 | 15 |
| > Was that really Wade, Lead Drawers, Boggs running from first to third
> on a single last night. And then trying to score on a sac. fly(in
> vain) using a quite acceptable fadeaway slide.
>
> And looking like he really cared.
I replayed that footage of Wade over and over and over, and my exacting
mathematical calculations have determined that Wade's speed was a
whopping
1.75 Mr_Potato_Heads
hth,
'Saw
|
88.459 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Get a haircut & get a real job | Tue Aug 03 1993 14:07 | 2 |
| How does that translate into Gedmans?
|
88.460 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Aug 03 1993 14:18 | 8 |
| 'Saw,
I'm glad I wasn't drinking something when I read that. I would
definitely have had to replace my keyboard.
Mr. Potato(e) Heads, indeed.
Scott
|
88.461 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Aug 03 1993 14:41 | 1 |
| Walt, Mr. Potato head = Gedman.
|
88.462 | Dadgum claim jumpahs! | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Tue Aug 03 1993 15:04 | 9 |
| HEY!
Watch out treading on my MPH@tm there willya??
I expect royalties!!
8^)
MikeL
|
88.463 | | CAM3::WAY | The thrill of the grass... | Tue Aug 03 1993 15:22 | 14 |
| MikeL,
I'll buy you a Bushmills at the nexted get-together, and I'll tell ye
tales of a bunch of English folks and heathen Americans sitting down
to play a fine Irish tune from County Derry......
A Mister_Potato_Head equals the speed with which Rich Gedman runs.
There is still great speculation far and wide over whether or not 'Saw
can achieve more than 1 Mister_Potato_Head when he runs.....
hth,
'Saw
|
88.464 | Woof | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Wed Aug 04 1993 14:13 | 9 |
| Ain't no one gonna say it??
Happy Birthday RocketMain(31). He got his birthday present....
NO RABIES.... however he is known to suffer from occasional bouts
of distemper.
Howl,
MikeL
|
88.465 | happy Birthday Jughaid.... | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Wed Aug 04 1993 16:30 | 0 |
88.466 | should be quite a finish | FRETZ::HEISER | beat them until morale improves | Mon Aug 09 1993 14:20 | 2 |
| The BoSox, Jays, and Yankmes sure have some interesting schedules over
the home stretch.
|
88.467 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Aug 09 1993 14:23 | 2 |
| Despite the Red Sox hitting like a whole team of Tony Pe�as, they go
7-6 on the road trip and come home to Fenway only 1 game out of first.
|
88.468 | flip-flop | FRETZ::HEISER | beat them until morale improves | Mon Aug 09 1993 14:34 | 3 |
| I was surprised to see in yesterday's paper that they lead the AL in
team pitching. It's probably been decades since they last did that.
On the other hand, the team batting rating is uncharacteristically low.
|
88.469 | | CSC32::M_MACGREGOR | | Mon Aug 09 1993 14:37 | 7 |
|
Mike, you obviosly don't follow the Red Sox very well. Not sure on the
numbers here, but I'd be willing to bet they have led the AL in
pitching for 3 of the last 6 years.
Marc
|
88.470 | Too much sports on tv this time of year | MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS | | Mon Aug 09 1993 14:40 | 7 |
| Not a bad rode trip, but the next 2 series could make or break the
season... A nice 6 game win streak right now would do wonder's but
if they lose 1/2 of there next 8 games they will be in BIG trouble.
I wish them well, NY and Toronto this week.... This could be a Cruel
week to Red Sox's Fans... I hope sele can win his next 2 :-)...
MaB
|
88.471 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Aug 09 1993 14:43 | 6 |
| � I was surprised to see in yesterday's paper that they lead the AL in
� team pitching. It's probably been decades since they last did that.
The last time they led the AL in pitching was...
1992
|
88.472 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 09 1993 14:56 | 13 |
|
>� I was surprised to see in yesterday's paper that they lead the AL in
>� team pitching. It's probably been decades since they last did that.
>
> The last time they led the AL in pitching was...
>
> 1992
Actually, Milwaukee just did edge the Sox in pitching last season.
Not sure, but the Sox' pitching might have led in 1990...
glenn
|
88.473 | and I don even lyke basaball! ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Mon Aug 09 1993 15:35 | 7 |
| fwiw
~50 games remaining - 31 of'm are @home.
I remain,
seconding this is gonna be a very interesting few weeks!
Kev
|
88.474 | Stopper=Darwin | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Mon Aug 09 1993 15:43 | 5 |
|
it's even more incredible when you consider the "horse" is having a gawd awful
year by mere mortal standards never mind by demi-gawd status....
mike
|
88.475 | The Demise..... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Tue Aug 10 1993 10:00 | 17 |
|
Well it happens every year at this time (give or take a month).
Bucky Dent caused it about 16 years ago, other names that come to mind
are Roberto Kelly, Billy Buck, Chris Chambliss, Matt Young, Mike Torrez,
Ron Guidry, Greg Nettles, and it goes on and on.
When will it end? Why do the fans keep coming back. Respect must
be given to these fans and it is warranted to the fan who sticks thru
it every year. Being from the greater New England area at times I wish
I could help "ease the pain" but I know in my heart they will never "go
the distance".
Oh you great #3 why oh why do you you linger so? Was the play that
bad?
Chappy
|
88.476 | 3-3 over next 6, but would love to see a Double Digiti run | MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS | | Tue Aug 10 1993 10:04 | 8 |
| That's funny on my way to work this morning I was trying to think if
this is too early for the sox to start slipping or not. I hope they
sweep the next 6, anything less may not be enough. Id like to see them
win it on there own and not have to rely on other teams losing to keep
it close. They have potential, I dont think theyll start there slide
just yet, I see them splitting 3-3, 2-1vsNY and 1-2vsToronto... will
keep them close enough for hope....
MaB
|
88.477 | Ha! It's way too early to feel my pain... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 10 1993 10:22 | 8 |
|
Chappy, I think you should wait for that 4-game series in Yankee
Stadium in mid-September to start your yapping. That's a much more
appropriate time and place for a Red Sox collapse. You should be happy
if the Yanks don't lose this series, dropping two of three...
glenn
|
88.479 | Jimmy Olsen wannabee!?!?!?!?!? | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Wed Aug 11 1993 09:27 | 11 |
|
FIVE - ZIP!!!!!!!
Yankmee's eat the big pickle!!!!
Parade in January!
I remain,
firsted with the breaking noos!
Kev
|
88.480 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Aug 11 1993 10:22 | 1 |
| Da boys from Seton Hall supplied the fireworks.
|
88.481 | Hesketh - Deer any minute - NO! | AKOCOA::BREEN | Hello Warner, about that NESN subscription | Wed Aug 11 1993 10:25 | 16 |
| Interesting situation with Hesketh. I heard this morning that a
Deer-jh trade is imminent with the nice performance last night
seemingly convincing the tigers to make the deal.
personally I think the sox would be crazy to deal hesketh since he is
their only lefthanded middle relief and spot starter. He has been
effective since end of june thought rarely used and fossas is only a
situation pitcher.
I have had this problem with stocks: you wanna get rid of a dog but
want the price to go up a bit; the stock goes up and then you say - I
can't get rid of it now it's looking good.
But you have to have those lefties right 'saw
b
|
88.482 | This is toooo easy! ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Wed Aug 11 1993 10:27 | 17 |
|
Hey MikeyC!!!!!
I gots ta know......
#1 - Is tonight's game an important one?
#2 - Isn't yo main man Roger scheduled to pitch?
#3 - based on #1 and #2, what's yo prediction?????
deening.....
I remain,
really curious on how you feel!
Kev
|
88.483 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Aug 11 1993 10:27 | 3 |
| Losing Hesketh would be no big deal. They should have dumped him
earlier to prevent having to send Ken Ryan back down to Pawtucket.
Fossas gives them the lefty out of the pen.
|
88.484 | We got Taylor | AD::HEATH | The jinx is broken, Sox '93 Champs | Wed Aug 11 1993 11:12 | 8 |
|
I also think loosing Hesketh would be no big deal. We've got Scott
Taylor at Pawtucket and can do the same job as Hesketh. What the big
problem is how to get Ryan back here AND keep a lefty (other than
Fossas) in the pen.
Jerry
|
88.485 | I wouldn't trust Scott Taylor with my wife! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 11 1993 12:11 | 19 |
|
> I also think loosing Hesketh would be no big deal. We've got Scott
> Taylor at Pawtucket and can do the same job as Hesketh. What the big
> problem is how to get Ryan back here AND keep a lefty (other than
> Fossas) in the pen.
I don't about this; Taylor has never demonstrated that he can throw
strikes, while Hesketh can at least do that. I've kind of been in the
minority on this issue. While I agree that at this time Ken Ryan
should on the team instead of Hesketh, Ryan's short absence has not
hurt the Sox and I don't like the idea of just dumping a functional
lefthanded starter/long reliever who could come in use down the road,
or even next year. John Dopson is most likely history after this
season, for one thing, and perhaps should be made history a little in
advance. You can't just look at the situation as it exists over the
next couple weeks...
glenn
|
88.486 | age-athing of beauty isn' it... | SALEM::STIG | | Wed Aug 11 1993 12:17 | 3 |
| how old is Deer and Hesketh???
stig
|
88.487 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Aug 11 1993 12:23 | 2 |
| Kev, MikeC hasn't answered ya because he's probably outside of Fenway
right now trying to get SRO tickets to see his idol, the Rocket.
|
88.488 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Noone loves me but my mother... | Wed Aug 11 1993 12:31 | 2 |
| Hesketh is 34, Deer 32.
|
88.489 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Wed Aug 11 1993 13:12 | 5 |
| > <<< Note 88.488 by ROYALT::ASHE "Noone loves me but my mother..." >>>
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
C'mon B.B.!!!!!
|
88.490 | with that said he'll probably throw a 2 - hitter | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Wed Aug 11 1993 13:29 | 6 |
|
Well obviously you have to like the Yanks' chances tonight. Clemens sucks
at Fenway and then you toss in the importance of the game and the fact that
it August and you got feel Rog will come up short again....
mike
|
88.491 | | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Wed Aug 11 1993 13:45 | 11 |
|
Yabbut youalso forgot to mention that his highness also has a era of
something like 3.55.
The Sox also brought Tim Neahring up from Pawtuckett.
I remain,
having a feeling that MikeyC's straddling the fence again!
Kev
;^)
|
88.492 | Good win last night... | MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS | | Wed Aug 11 1993 14:42 | 4 |
| Just heard the new's CLAMons got big by a bird and wont be pitching
tonight :-) ....
Its nice to see other's have the same faith in CLAMons that I has ...
|
88.493 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Aug 11 1993 14:44 | 3 |
| � The Sox also brought Tim Neahring up from Pawtuckett.
How'd they make room for him?
|
88.494 | Clemens will come through... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 11 1993 14:49 | 8 |
|
Well, I'll once again express my faith in Roger Clemens, but I can
guarantee that he won't win if the Sox put a "0" or a "1" up on the
scoreboard again, as they have in his last three starts. No one's
that good...
glenn
|
88.495 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Noone loves me but my mother... | Wed Aug 11 1993 16:07 | 2 |
| Sent Riles down...
|
88.496 | why not a MaryAnn > Ginger LDUC??? | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Wed Aug 11 1993 16:45 | 7 |
|
Wait a dang minnow there Kev, I ain't strattlin' the fence. I predict that
Rog will loose and loose big. Problem is I got a KOD like the Dinz so every
time I open up and blast his royalness he usually gives you'se guy ammo to
bomb me with the nexted(tm) day....
mike
|
88.497 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Noone loves me but my mother... | Wed Aug 11 1993 16:48 | 5 |
| Maryann... gotta love the braids... Ginger would be too busy putting on
makeup...
I think Key wins tonight...
|
88.498 | (8^) | PTOVAX::JACOB | Muck the Fets | Wed Aug 11 1993 16:55 | 12 |
|
>> -< why not a MaryAnn > Ginger LDUC??? >-
Ginger had that used look, like she hit every director's casting couch
that was open at the time.
Mary Ann had that wholesome, virgin type look, although everybody knew
that she and Gilligan were skinny-dipping late at night in the lagoon
and he was nailing her on the beach.
JaKe
|
88.499 | Ginger Roolz! | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Wed Aug 11 1993 16:59 | 3 |
|
ya but, Ginger looked like she knew her way around the bedroom while
MaryAnn probably took a bath with her eyes closed....
|
88.500 | | PTOVAX::JACOB | Muck the Fets | Wed Aug 11 1993 17:04 | 9 |
|
>>ya but, Ginger looked like she knew her way around the bedroom while
>>MaryAnn probably took a bath with her eyes closed....
Nah, Ginger probably counted the cracks on the ceiling, whilst Mary Ann
was one of those that looked naive, but was a wild one in the sack.
JaKe
|
88.501 | Roger's first punchout tonight is career #2000... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 11 1993 17:04 | 1 |
|
|
88.503 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Aug 11 1993 17:18 | 10 |
| Tommy,
Most of 'em are already trying to find a diversion for when the Red Sox
inevitably blow it once again.
The others figure that sooner or later they'll know how the pennant race turns
out; but MaryAnn vs Ginger is a deep philosophical discussion that can go
on for far longer without ever coming to a consensus.
The Crazy Met
|
88.504 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Noone loves me but my mother... | Wed Aug 11 1993 17:36 | 6 |
| I'm not a Yank fan, I'm not a Sox fan... my team is 8 games out. Why
should I get caught up in the "Pennant Fever grips hub" propaganda.
I bet Skipper would go after "Lovey" before he'd go after Ginger...
|
88.506 | (8^) | PTOVAX::JACOB | Muck the Fets | Wed Aug 11 1993 17:47 | 7 |
|
>>I bet Skipper would go after "Lovey" before he'd go after Ginger...
Nah, the Skipper and the Perfessor was an item, though.
JaKe
|
88.507 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Aug 11 1993 18:35 | 6 |
| �Most of 'em are already trying to find a diversion for when the Red Sox
�inevitably blow it once again.
Those looking for a diversion appear to be Tiger, Mets, and Indians
fans. Sox fans are too caught up in the excitement of a pennant race
and a renewal of one of the oldest rivalries in sports.
|
88.508 | I've been RON too long | VAOP28::Rice | Beer Sponge | Wed Aug 11 1993 19:50 | 12 |
|
Yeah, it's quite a race to see who the Jays will allow to carry their bats
in the LCS.
As a former Yankee fan it DOES warm my heart to see a spark of life back in
Yankee stadium, pitiful as it may be. And as a long-time Red Sox hater I am
very happy to see them close enough to deliver real frustration and disappoint-
ment to their hundreds of fans once again.
;)
josh
|
88.509 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '93 | Thu Aug 12 1993 00:04 | 7 |
| The sound of MikeC rejoicing comes in LOUD and clear.
8-3 Red Sox lose, Clemens gets the loss and solidifies his reputation
as a bad big game pitcher.
The Crazy Met
|
88.510 | gotta love the pitch he threw to Williams | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Thu Aug 12 1993 09:41 | 9 |
|
> 8-3 Red Sox lose, Clemens gets the loss and solidifies his reputation
> as a bad big game pitcher.
It wasn't his fault Craze, he got "Squeezed!!!"
;^)
|
88.511 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Thu Aug 12 1993 10:15 | 7 |
|
Yeah he was squeezed all night...
Not!!!!!
Chappy
|
88.512 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Thu Aug 12 1993 10:27 | 11 |
| Skipper was doing Gilligan, the Professor was doing Mary Ann, and Ginger
was doing Mr. Howell....
That's the official version.
I didn't see the game last night, but from the sounds of it I didn't miss
much....
'Saw
|
88.513 | Clemens sipped | RAAJI::MORGAN | O, O, O, O, O, .OOO | Thu Aug 12 1993 10:32 | 6 |
| It was a much different strike zone last night than the previous, but
Clemens should have been able to adjust and he didn't. There was a lot
of sharp plays in the field by both teams. Difference last night was
definitely in the pitching.
Steve
|
88.514 | Radion announcers made Johnny Most look impartial! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Thu Aug 12 1993 10:36 | 15 |
|
Lasted night I was playing Norm_the_Carpenter and had the Sox game on
the radion. About 6 pitches into the game the radion announcers were
moaning and groaning about the umpire nad the way he was claaing "good"
pitches balls and getting Roger all kind of upset.
I couldn't help but think that it was really reall unfair not to give
Rog the bigger strike zone and that obviously the Yankmees had done a
Clemson_ref(tm) deal with the guy!
I remain,
thinking that Rog was robbed!!!!!
Kev
;^)
|
88.515 | | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Aug 12 1993 10:41 | 12 |
| Roger's mistake was getting frustrated at the perceived "squeezing".
Hell he walked 6 so he let the "strike zone" get the best of him.
Like Mattingly said, I thought Rog was just a hair off. And the
ump called it that way. Close but no cigar. After the game Clemens
said " I thought I was making good pitches, but obviously not."
Didn't sound like whining to me after the game.
We all know that Scott was giving Key mo' leeway 8^)
MikeL
|
88.516 | trade-'m? | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Thu Aug 12 1993 10:44 | 9 |
| Rog also was quoted as saying that his 9-9 record wasn't important to
him!
Sounds like a Wade-Not kinda guy!
I remain,
wondering if his contract has incentives????
Kev
|
88.517 | No more Alan Alda for Roger, time to get mean again | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 12 1993 11:00 | 17 |
|
I don't know; I don't think Roger's been getting angry enough lately.
I think he's mellowed, and post-Cooney has reined himself in somewhat.
Let's see the old Roger again. I'm tired of the postgame analysis of
whether Roger had his stuff or not, or was just a tad off here or
there. If batters are going to stand up there and take pitch after
pitch just off the black without a call so that they can eventually sit
on a fat one, I say that Roger should just make it easier on both the
batter and the ump by making the hitters take a few pitches from the
seat of their pants once in a while. Yes, Clemens later did sail a
glancing blow off Bernie Williams' haid, but that was too late, out of
place, and almost certainly an accident. C'mon Rog, take a lesson from
your idol Nolie and let the batters know very early in the game that
they'd best not turn into complete statues up there!
glenn
|
88.518 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Thu Aug 12 1993 11:02 | 11 |
| > -< No more Alan Alda for Roger, time to get mean again >-
Amen.
I think we should send Rog a barrel of rice for his arm. I'm sure he
didn't do that this off-season.
He's got to fine The Zone again....
'Saw
|
88.519 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Thu Aug 12 1993 11:52 | 20 |
| <<< Note 88.518 by CAM3::WAY "Sweet Home Chicago" >>>
> -< No more Alan Alda for Roger, time to get mean again >-
Amen.
I think we should send Rog a barrel of rice for his arm. I'm sure he
didn't do that this off-season.
He's got to fine The Zone again....
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
yeah the strike zone!!!
While Rog didn't do much whinning last night, Rich Gale sounded like a
two year old.....face it folks without the bigger than average strike
zone he's no more than an average pitcher as his 500 record would attest
too......
;^)
|
88.520 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Noone loves me but my mother... | Thu Aug 12 1993 12:00 | 5 |
| Sorry Tommy, if you noticed, I also mentioned I thought Key would
win lasted night. Guess I called that one right...
-Saw, does that mean Ginger did it alone?
|
88.522 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Noone loves me but my mother... | Thu Aug 12 1993 12:05 | 4 |
| I'm just tired of every announcer in this area swearing he's still
the best pitcher in baseball. His ERA for August is 9.00. He's
a .500 pitcher this year. He's NOT the best pitcher in baseball
right now. Period.
|
88.523 | and he never was.... | CNTROL::CHILDS | How'd you get so Rude and Reckless? | Thu Aug 12 1993 12:14 | 0 |
88.524 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the fun begins....... | Thu Aug 12 1993 12:42 | 4 |
| Roger Clemens record since Sept 12th(?) of lasted year is 9-12
Era 3.91 (?)....
REK
|
88.525 | Okay, so who is "the best pitcher in baseball"? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 12 1993 12:42 | 19 |
|
> I'm just tired of every announcer in this area swearing he's still
> the best pitcher in baseball. His ERA for August is 9.00. He's
> a .500 pitcher this year. He's NOT the best pitcher in baseball
> right now. Period.
Maybe the reason is that most of these announcers have the smarts not
to make such proclamations based on what a player has done over a
period as short as a month, a half season, or even a full season. If
you go by those standards, then we gets these perennial claims that
Greg Swindell, Charles Nagy, Mike Mussina, David Wells, and Jimmy Key
are "the best pitcher in baseball", when at the time any such claim was
and is utter nonsense. Roger Clemens may be coming close to being
dethroned, if he hasn't been already, but after leading the league in
ERA for three straight seasons what he's experienced this year could be
a mere bump in the road.
glenn
|
88.526 | There's only one who possibly *deserves* the tag | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 12 1993 13:24 | 22 |
|
Thinking about this a little more, there's only one guy in the major
leagues who I believe has *earned* the right to take the "best pitcher
in baseball" mantle from Sir Roger (who earned it himself by putting up
nothing less than a stellar season in each and every year from
1986-92). That pitcher is:
Greg Maddux. He's the only guy who's been at the top of his league for
five years or so, consistently and without interruption. Not even Tom
Glavine has matched that.
If Roger can right himself over the rest of the year (which for the
first time I am experiencing some serious doubts about), then he may
still be the one. Consider that a mere three starts ago no one was
too upset with his record of 9-6, 3.20 ERA, in a season in which had
suffered a minor injury setback. It wasn't a great record, not up to
Clemens' usual standards, but no one was panicking. I'm not sure we
should be panicking yet over three consecutive poor starts, as unusual
as that is for Clemens.
glenn
|
88.527 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Aug 12 1993 13:28 | 6 |
| Actually in most years, Clemens seems to go through
a stretch of 3-4 games that were at the very least not good. Too bad for the Red
Sox it is happening against teams the Sox need to beat. I assume Clemens will
not pitch in the Blue Jays series - any plans on having him pitch on Sunday?
The Crazy Met
|
88.528 | Bahhhhhhhhhh | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Thu Aug 12 1993 13:32 | 7 |
|
Glenn I know what you mean I know this one fan who thinks Sele
is the 2nd coming. :-)
Chappy
|
88.529 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Thu Aug 12 1993 13:42 | 3 |
| Sox oughta get rid of the bum. Send Clemens to Detroit!
Lee
|
88.530 | Standard fare | SALEM::DODA | Ranting and.... Ranting | Thu Aug 12 1993 15:16 | 5 |
| Lee,
Would he then be "The best" Spark has ever seen?
daryll
|
88.531 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Noone loves me but my mother... | Thu Aug 12 1993 16:16 | 4 |
| I would say 86 on is going back a little far. As of now, taking more
than 92 into account, I'd put Maddux, Glavine and McDowell ahead of
Clemens. I'd have to think Rijo and Benes are on around the same
level.
|
88.533 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Noone loves me but my mother... | Thu Aug 12 1993 16:46 | 2 |
| I would guess Johnson (see Kruk,John) or Dibble might strike more
fear into hitters...
|
88.534 | All I'm saying is, don't shovel the dirt on top *yet* | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 12 1993 16:52 | 25 |
|
Waitaminute. I didn't say you had to go back to 1986 to support a
claim for Clemens. I said that he's been outstanding every year since
then. Until this season, he's been better in recent years than he was
in the 1987-89 timeframe. Like I said, league ERA leader, 1990, 1991,
and 1992. Right now, at this very moment, Roger Clemens is *not* the
best pitcher in baseball. However, by such shortterm standards, he
could re-establish himself as such by September. Who knows? If he
were to, say, come back and lead the league in ERA in 1994, no one is
going to care much what a half-dozen really poor starts did to his
reputation for a brief period in 1993, and he'd still be considered
"the best". Objectivity must take into account more than the previous
two months. Consider that *none* of the recent greats-- Koufax,
Gibson, Seaver, Carlton-- ever had an uninterrupted 7-year run of
excellence like Clemens did, and one mediocre season did not signal
their deathknell.
Part of the problem with naming someone else is that there really is
no other obvious dominant, "most feared" pitcher in baseball right now
to fill that void (unless you're talking literal physical fear-- and
then you could say that a borderline stiff like Randy Johnson is "the
best".)
glenn
|
88.535 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Noone loves me but my mother... | Thu Aug 12 1993 17:03 | 3 |
| If Clemens comes back and puts those numbers up, it will be one of the
greatest comebacks in history... oh wait, I heard that somewhere else
before.... (smiley goes here...)
|
88.536 | | DECWET::METZGER | Non-alcoholic beer. What's the point? | Thu Aug 12 1993 17:10 | 16 |
|
I'd say right now that McDowell is the best pitcher in baseball. He
consistantly wins and he always keeps his team in the game. I don't think I've
seen him have a stinker game in a long time.
He pitches the way Stewart and Morris used to and the way I read Walter "Big
Train" Johnson did. When he's ahead he coasts a bit and lets the other team
pick up a few base hits but when it comes time to bear down....Boom...game over
and another victory for Black Jack.
You won't see him atop the leaders boards in anything much more than wins...but
isn't winning what the game is all about?
Metz
|
88.537 | | CNTROL::HUBER | File and Forget | Thu Aug 12 1993 17:27 | 38 |
|
Re .536
> I'd say right now that McDowell is the best pitcher in baseball. He
> consistantly wins and he always keeps his team in the game. I don't think
> I've seen him have a stinker game in a long time.
He's had no truly awful games for a while, but a lot haven't been
quality starts either...
> He pitches the way Stewart and Morris used to and the way I read Walter "Big
> Train" Johnson did. When he's ahead he coasts a bit and lets the other team
> pick up a few base hits but when it comes time to bear down....Boom...game
> over and another victory for Black Jack.
Nice theory, but it doesn't work that way, and specifically hasn't for
McDowell this year (I don't have the study a USENETer did in front of
me, but the basic conclussion it came to way that the runs McDowell
gave up were basically evenly distributed - there was no trend toward
him giving up most of his runs _after_ the Sox built a lead).
For example, his performance a couple of weeks back vs. the Indians.
He gave up 4 in the first, and barely managed to sticks around for
seven innings. In the bottom of the seventh, _after_ he'd thrown his
last pitch for the evening, the Sox went ahead, an eventually won the
game.
> You won't see him atop the leaders boards in anything much more than wins...
> but isn't winning what the game is all about?
Absolutely. If pitchers victory totals had any strong correlation to
their contribution to team victories, then McDowell would certainly
be as good as anyone. They don't, and McDowell just hasn't been as
good as Key, or Fernandez, or even Clemens, so far this year. Take
park effect into account, and he might not even be doing as well as
David Wells. Still a fine pitcher, though.
Joe
|
88.538 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 12 1993 17:38 | 39 |
|
> I'd say right now that McDowell is the best pitcher in baseball. He
> consistantly wins and he always keeps his team in the game. I don't think I've
> seen him have a stinker game in a long time.
McDowell has been bailed out several times this year, more so than last
year. He'll win more games, but he's having a worse season. That's
what 5.7 R/G in support will do for you (Clemens is getting 3.5 R/G,
second-worst in the league to another guy who is having a "terrible"
season, David Cone). Still, he's a candidate.
> He pitches the way Stewart and Morris used to and the way I read Walter "Big
> Train" Johnson did. When he's ahead he coasts a bit and lets the other team
> pick up a few base hits but when it comes time to bear down....Boom...game over
> and another victory for Black Jack.
Walter Johnson played for one of the worst teams of all time for 20 years
and still won over 400 games with a lifetime ERA around 2.00. There
was very little coasting afforded The Big Train (I think you might be
thinking of Christy Mathewson, who wrote the book on "coasting", but
also didn't really need to, he was so good). That's greatness. In
Stew's own words, he or Morris couldn't carry Walter's jock.
> You won't see him atop the leaders boards in anything much more than wins...but
> isn't winning what the game is all about?
Yup. But let's wait and see if it continues when the going gets a bit
rougher for McDowell. If you start with the fact that McDowell's
average opponent has had a 5.50 ERA in the games pitched against him,
realistically how often do you expect him to lose (that's like pitching
against the Rockies every day)? These one- or two-season things when
you play on a good team that scores lots of runs are common. Clemens
has one of the few best winning percentages of all time, yet it's
almost been like he somehow doesn't know how to win, because of some of
the low-scoring teams he's been on recently. But that's the test of
time, pitching in good times and bad.
glenn
|
88.539 | AL CY YOUNG AWARD WINNER... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Thu Aug 12 1993 17:49 | 7 |
|
Just say " Jimmy Key. "
Chappy :-)
|
88.540 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 12 1993 17:53 | 9 |
|
> Just say " Jimmy Key. "
Can't argue with that right now, but look for Key to get jobbed by
McDowell, who will likely be pitching for a division winner with two
other pitchers performing about as well as he...
glenn
|
88.541 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Thu Aug 12 1993 18:43 | 4 |
| Chappy would almost rather have the chance to bitch that another Yankee was
robbed of another award than to actually have Key win Cy Young this year.
The Crazy Met
|
88.542 | | DECWET::METZGER | Non-alcoholic beer. What's the point? | Thu Aug 12 1993 20:12 | 15 |
|
I always read that the Big train kept the super heater in his pocket until he
actually needed it and then it was by the batter before he even knew it. Now
that isn't actually coasting but you don't see many a pitcher these days
holding anything back for fear of getting relieved.
I still think McDowell wil shine in the post season with his attitude and
ability to bear down when the pressure is on. I think he's only going to get
better for the next 3-4 years.
he does have the big benefit of playing on a good offensive team where he
doesn't need to pitch a 2 run game in order to win.
Metz
|
88.543 | Yanks rule Sox Suck.... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 07:31 | 14 |
|
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.......
WAIT TIL NEXT YEAR BABY.....
Thank you Babe! :-)
Some rivalry.
Chappy
|
88.544 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Fri Aug 13 1993 07:52 | 10 |
| I saw an interesting stat in the paper yesterday, I'll have to bring it
in and get all of it.
The object was the win record in their first 5 seasons for 300 career
winners.
If I recall correctly, Nolan Ryan had only 29 wins in his first 5
years, the fewest of the big guys.
Lee
|
88.546 | I resemble that remark | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 09:44 | 9 |
|
Obnoxious over bearing pain in the butt? Bahhhhhhhhhh
As long as it's a Overhyping FairWeather 75year non
Championship HAving Red Sux fan that's killed well I guess its OK.
Chappy
|
88.547 | has the handwriting begun to appear? ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Fri Aug 13 1993 10:29 | 111 |
| Is it too early to be putting thisted sorts thang in?
I'm deening.....
-< CAM::SPORTS -- Digital's Daily Sports Tabloid >-
================================================================================
Note 29.2039 The Boston Red Sox Note 2039 of 2355
CUPMK::DEVLIN "Je voudrais boire quelque chose." 100 lines 16-SEP-1992 13:18
-< It's that time of year again..... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTE: Updated since the original....
STAGE: Somewhere on the Mass Turnpike. A long, king-of-the-road,
touring bus, with tinted windows, and gothic paintings on the side
hurtles down the freeway - flashing its lights at any import or
domestic that dares to get in its way. It blares its horn at trucks,
which obediently get out of the way. State troopers look the other way,
knowing that they can do nothing to stop this rambling vehicle.
It cruises past Sturbridge and Westborough - causing folks to feel a
strange coolness sweep their body. Those foolhearty to stare at the
riveted behemoth get a glimpse of the destination sign:
"EXPRESS: FENWAY PARK"
It rampages steadily, always heading east. And folks in towns it
hurtles by swear they hear orchestral strains and the sounds of a diva
warming up "LA LA LA_LA_LA_LA_LA_LAAAAAAAAA"
The crescendo gets louder the closer to Landsdowne street it gets. At
the Natick tollbooths, the bus flashes its lights, blares its horns,
and the booth collector only gets a glimpse of the driver. He looks
vaguely familiar, a rotund man, with 'Babe' stitched across his breast
pocket. A faded poster for the opening of "No No Nanette" can barely
be seen through the windows.
Inside the bus, a fever pitch is developing. The star is still warming
up - exercising her sizable lungs. Her manager, Bucky, jokes with
Enos, the wardrobe man, and Bill, the accountant. "Love Beantown,"
Bucky guffaws..."It's the one steady gig this chic has - nothing after
this til we hit Madison Square in May! Haw!"
"LALALALALALAAAAALADEEDAAAAAAA!!!!!!!" the lady bellows.
The bus rolls through the outlying 'burbs of Boston - like a metal
apocalyptic horseman. Grandfathers suddenly sit straight up and say
"Throw the Ball! Throw the Ball! He can't score from FIRST!!!"
Their sons and daughters scream "Get up Luis, GET UP!" Their sons and
daughters cry "Jim Willoughby!" and their children spit up and wet
their beds, chanting 'One Strike AWAY! One strike!'
A shrill laughter fills the night, as the bus of doom slams into
Beantown. In the corporate offices, the owners feel the presence
of the husband and wife team that guided the team for so long -
their mournful cries send shivers down their necks - he glances at
the calendar - SEPTEMBER - and he realizes the Lady isn't even
waiting til October this time....
In Kenmore Square, everything moves at a slower speed. A dark cloud
obscures the stars. No animals move, rats and pigeons stay holed up until
the inevitable passes. The faithful file in, feeling strangely
germanic and lethargic. In the clubhouse, the Ol' Towne Team wears a
collective grimace.
The Bus hurtles down Beacon Street, the noise too much for people to
take. The lady keeps warming up, the bus driver blares his horn. The
road crew opens the windows to laugh at the cowering masses "Poor
schmucks" Bucky roars.....A chant that sounds like "Eupheus, Eupheus"
can be heard....a cruel mocking chant.
Those with strong stomachs see the vanity license plate "1918"
A block from the destination, Babe starts laughing, "Hey guys - those
spirits are going to try to stop us again - Won't those poor souls
EVER learn!!!" A ghostly collection of ex-Sox and fans form a human
chain, trying to stop the bus - but they freeze when they see the
name of the bus, emblazoned in Yankee Blue - "Frazee"
The bus rolls right over a sausage vendor. The doors open. The
entourage gets out, slowly rolling a red carpet, which fits right
through the legs of Bill. The star slowly steps down, with
a Toronto batting helmet on, a Genuine Bill Buckner autographed glove,
Enos Slaughter's spikes, and a variety of other articles of clothing.
Inside the park, the announcer asks everyone "To Please Stand...."
But just as the strains of the National Anthem are about to start, a
huge booming of drums cuts it off. The lights in the stadium dim. A
spotlight hits the top of the Green Monster, and 36,000 souls gasp -
the
FAT LADY has arrived....She belts out one last LALALALAAAAALADEEEDA...
The glass protecting the 600 Club cracks.....
And to the tune of the "Hallelujah Chorus", she belts out this year's
rendition ....
"OH ITS ALL OVER NOW, ALL OVER, FORTHEREDSOXFORTHEREDSOXFORTHEREDSOX
OH ITS ALL OVER NOW, ALL OVER,
WAITTILNEXTYEARWAITTILNEXTYEARWAAAIIITTTTIL NEXT YEAR..."
From Bar Harbour to Winter Haven, Provincetown to Great Barrington,
the faded hats with the "B" are placed away for another winter.
When the Fat Lady finishes singing, a small fire starts burning in the
hearts of the faithful. The fire of eternal hope, mixed with the embers
of despair...another ride on the Red Sox Ferris Wheel has lurched to a
stop...and once again, the Sox fan is stuck near the top. The only
solace one can take is to peer up at the seats stuck just above -
the one with those two guys from Chicago....
JD
|
88.548 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Everybody hurts... sometimes... | Fri Aug 13 1993 10:37 | 2 |
| Maybe Kev... if the Tigers are out, the RedSox are probably next...
|
88.549 | Beavis...Butthead....Chappy | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Fri Aug 13 1993 10:48 | 28 |
| Chappy,
You really ought to have a little more respect. Any fool can root for the
team that has won the most World Series in baseball. It's EASY to
root for a team who had the likes of Ruth, Gehrig, Mantle, Maris, Whitey Ford
etc etc etc.
In fact, it's probably quite chic, kind of like all the faux football feigns
who started rooting for the Dallas Sowboys during the 70s (mainly because
of their bodacious cheerleaders).
But it takes something special to be a fan of a team like the Sox. (Or
of some of the teams that don't exist any more -- the Washington Senators,
the Boston Braves, the Philadelphia Athletics).
So, enjoy this today.
But you can bet your last dollar that when the Sox do whup up on the
Yankees, we'll come up with something more original than a
Beavis and Butthead-like "hah aha hah...Red Sox Suck".....
8^)
'Saw
|
88.550 | He's not done yet... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 10:50 | 15 |
|
Hate to bring it up, but with the early returns in, it looks like we
may be able to add Wade Boggs to the list of certified ex-Sox
Sox-killers at Fenway. And don't give me that business about "nobody
fears him anymore". I fear the damned guy every time he's up there.
He's still got his most important asset, his batting eye. Looking at
it from the other side now it's even easier to appreciate what the guy
does by standing up there and taking 6-10 pitches out of your pitcher's
arm in *every* at-bat before starting a rally with a hit or those damned
walks. It shows up as a mere 1-for-1 in the box score, but Boggs and
his 4 walks, 2 runs and in the middle of 3 scoring rallies was the
difference in last night's game.
glenn
|
88.551 | And that's coming from a huge fan of Beavis and Butthead! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 10:51 | 1 |
|
|
88.552 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 11:00 | 12 |
|
HE HE!!!!!
Oh Sawmain when will you ever learn. The Sox will never
get back at the Yankees. I was pitching a TENT last night just as that
last out was made. Enjoy the Sox good fortunes this year. :-) cuz with
that stocked minor league farm system of theirs you might not see a
rivalry for the next few years.
Chappy
|
88.553 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Fri Aug 13 1993 11:05 | 17 |
| > HE HE!!!!!
>
> Oh Sawmain when will you ever learn. The Sox will never
> get back at the Yankees. I was pitching a TENT last night just as that
> last out was made. Enjoy the Sox good fortunes this year. :-) cuz with
> that stocked minor league farm system of theirs you might not see a
> rivalry for the next few years.
I'm sure ol' George will find a way to mess up the Yankees, just like
he did before. What you're seeing now if the harvest of the seeds
sewn while George was "out".....
'Saw
|
88.554 | Fess up, Chappy, was it you? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 11:10 | 17 |
|
Chappy, were you by any chance at the game last night? I know that
we've heard that when these thousands of Yankee fans (many of them
frontrunning native Bostonians) descend on Fenway Park that they all
keep their mouths shut and are well-behaved, but as luck would have
it I had the one old drunken Yankee fan in the entire park sitting
right in front of me, and he had this habit of standing up after every
marginal play in favor of the Yanks (some of them not even in their
favor, but you have to excuse his confusion), turning around and waving
his arms and hat, alternately slurring his speech and barking (yes,
barking). This jerk *sat* and booed the 7th-inning stretch and when it
was over he had the nerve to ask me if the beer lines were closed yet,
fercryinoutloud! I know that the Yanks have almost always won these
big games, but do their "fans" have to torment us so?
glenn
|
88.555 | | MKFSB::LONG | stuck in CATCH-UP mode | Fri Aug 13 1993 11:31 | 9 |
| The classic last night was after the game in the parking lot. A
ten year old kid was parading around the lot carrying a big sign
which read: "Honk if Lou sucks"
Needless to say the lot was roaring by the time the kid made his
second trip around.
billl
|
88.557 | If you don't like the guy, just make something up... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 12:14 | 26 |
|
>> It shows up as a mere 1-for-1 in the box score, but Boggs and
>> his 4 walks, 2 runs and in the middle of 3 scoring rallies was the
>> difference in last night's game.
>
> Gee, and I thought the Sox' bats or lack thereof was the diff.
If you look at from the Sox' side of the ledger, yes. If you look at
it from the Yanks' side, Boggs' offense was the biggest contribution
and without it Aaron Sele pitches a similar if not quite as brilliant
a game as Perez.
> And while you may "fear" him (for all that's worth) Wade at
> this stage of his career is a mere platoon player.
That's dead wrong. Boggs is an everyday player. He takes more days
off than he used to, which is reasonable, but he's still in there
almost every night, including against lefties. He was in there against
Viola the other night.
You don't have to like him, and in fact personally after these first
two Fenway series the guy's grace period with me has just about worn
off, but these are the facts.
glenn
|
88.558 | | LAGUNA::MAY_BR | squished tomatoes | Fri Aug 13 1993 12:44 | 10 |
| > <<< Note 88.543 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "No.3 looms over Fenway....."
> >>> -< Yanks rule Sox Suck.... >-
It's interesting to read this crap by Chappy, knowing that the Yankee
fans, felt that they had to start a members only conference so they
wouldn't be subject to similar bs by Red Sox fans. Judging by how
little we saw him in here when the Sox won an earlier series, I'd say
that Chappy is of the dish it out, but can't take it fan variety.
brews
|
88.560 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the LAWSUIT begins........ | Fri Aug 13 1993 12:57 | 9 |
| BTW a friend of mine is going to the Sox game tonight and is bringing
along a sign for TV 38....
Chappy SIPS!!!
Please look at the bleachers for this sign...
REK
PS Yes, the friend is a noter.............
|
88.561 | I didn't know Karen could write! ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Fri Aug 13 1993 13:00 | 1 |
|
|
88.562 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Fri Aug 13 1993 13:12 | 3 |
| And REK also mentions a friend of his - will wonders never cease??
The Crazy Met
|
88.563 | Go Yanks.... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 13:17 | 7 |
|
By the way I can take whatever is dished out. Afterall I gotta
live and work in this Boston biased area don't I?
Chappy
|
88.565 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the LAWSUIT begins........ | Fri Aug 13 1993 13:38 | 6 |
| TCC at LEAST I have some friends... More than I can say about METS
fans......
:-}
REK
|
88.566 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Everybody hurts... sometimes... | Fri Aug 13 1993 13:44 | 2 |
| Too bad Lou banned signs in the ballpark...
|
88.567 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Fri Aug 13 1993 13:50 | 3 |
| Walt, so your mom doesn't love you anymore??
The Crazy Met
|
88.568 | Than again 75 years is pretty personal..... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 14:04 | 8 |
|
No the only time I show my face in this note is when the two
teams are playing each other for something worth something. You Sox
fans take things too personal??
Chappy
|
88.569 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Everybody hurts... sometimes... | Fri Aug 13 1993 14:16 | 2 |
| re 27.2141...
|
88.571 | Blow as long and hard as you must; we know what you are... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 14:26 | 11 |
|
> No the only time I show my face in this note is when the two
> teams are playing each other for something worth something.
Yeah, right. Amazing thing that you were nowhere to be seen in here on
Wednesday morning after the Yanks had lost the series opener. Face it,
Chappy, you're an in-your-face frontrunner in the finest SPROTS
tradition...
glenn
|
88.572 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 14:49 | 14 |
|
Glen if I valued your opinion that last reply woulda hurt.
To tell you the truth I was getting it from all sides here at WMO and
didn't need to proclaim a loss in here? But as soon as the Yanks win
the next 2 all the guys who were giving me sh!t here all climbed under
rocks and I can't seem to find them?
I'm not a front runner, if the Yankees lose 12 in a row I'll
gloat when they win that 13th game.
Chappy
|
88.574 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the LAWSUIT begins........ | Fri Aug 13 1993 14:52 | 4 |
| Chappy-stick, when you spout crap you get crap back....
If you can't take it then don't say it....
REK
|
88.575 | Am not, are too.... | ROYALT::ASHE | Everybody hurts... sometimes... | Fri Aug 13 1993 14:54 | 1 |
| This is much better than the Maryann-Ginger discussion...
|
88.576 | Bottom line. Sox Fans can't take a joke????? | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:01 | 8 |
|
Sorry Tommy I forgot to put a :^) after that.
And your calling me dumb?
Chappy
|
88.577 | Aw, Walt, go start a Tigers-Brewers rivalry note... ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:01 | 1 |
|
|
88.578 | It's Friday guys calm down.... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:03 | 7 |
|
REK let it fly I got a fan too.
Chappy
|
88.579 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:03 | 15 |
| > Glen if I valued your opinion that last reply woulda hurt.
Chappy,
You should value Glenn's opinion. It's been my experience in here and
in person, that Glenn is one of the most learned baseball fans in here.
Now, I don't know if he has a Lou Gehrig poster, like I do, but he
knows his baseball, and is nothing if not objective....
Just thought I'd point that fack(tm) out....
'Sawa
|
88.580 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:09 | 7 |
|
Well he was so right about Mattingly's uselessnes as a 3rd batter
earlier this year that I just lost all cause.
Chappy
|
88.581 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:11 | 13 |
| > Well he was so right about Mattingly's uselessnes as a 3rd batter
> earlier this year that I just lost all cause.
Well, that's okay.
I'll see if I can't come up with another story from my personal life
to cheer you up 8^) 8^) 8^)
'Saw
|
88.582 | | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:15 | 10 |
| All REK really, really wanted to say (as a tribute to something near
and dear to his heart),
"Chap, if'n ya cain't run with the big dogs, stay on the Porch!"
WooF!
I remain,
Kev_for_Rek_for_Hal!
|
88.583 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Everybody hurts... sometimes... | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:17 | 1 |
| Obviously, I can't start one on Camden Yards vs. Tiger Stadium...
|
88.584 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:17 | 5 |
| Say, did you hear Jim McMahon got traded?
'Saw_for_Hawk
|
88.585 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:19 | 19 |
|
> Now, I don't know if he has a Lou Gehrig poster, like I do, but he
> knows his baseball, and is nothing if not objective....
Naw, 'Saw, my favorite non-hometeam legend of all time is Willie Mays,
on a account that he was better than Mickey Mantle... ;-)
Mattingly *has* experienced a semi-amazing resurgence over the past two
months. Right now he's performing at a level that he hasn't seen since
1989, so maybe he's really not all done as a #3 hitter, maybe he was
just in hibernation. So sue me. If he was hitting .220 he'd still be
the best hitter in the league to Chappy.
Speaking of credibility, you still convinced Wade's doing nothing for
your guys, Chap? That .350 BA/.450 OBP since he moved to the leadoff
spot hasn't made a difference?
glenn
|
88.586 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:24 | 9 |
|
I never said he wasn't doing anything for my team. I can't stand
the guy and I think we'd be doing better with Charlie Hayes as our
3Bman. I still think he's selfish and not a team player though.
Chappy
|
88.587 | | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:30 | 35 |
| Yo glenn!
Whar was you settin' lasted night. Me pop and I had beeyootifull seats
up behind the Sox dugout in the uppa box seats. Too bad the Bosox
did squat.
Coupla observations.
Greenwell is a sucka for that first pitch. Perez teased him with a high
riser all night and Greeniw took da bait. Totally misplayed a
"wall-ball" wannabe in the 8th.
Po' Billy Hatcher ain't no CFer. If he played any deeper, he'd be
a bleacher season ticket holder.
Man, Sele's got a dadgum major-league hook.
It's painful to even watch Dawson try to laig one out.
Yup, Boggs' eye is back. Twas funny to hear Yank fans cheering
ChickenMain wif clenched teeth.
O'Neil thinks his *youknowwhat* don't stink
Sad to see ol' Frank Howard reduced to the clubhouse batman.
Gallego's a damn good versatile player.
Noticed only a couple of obnoxious fans, one Yank and one Sox.
They both looked like the West Virginny DD twins.
Hey Chappy, where was you sittin'?? 8^)
MikeL
|
88.588 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:33 | 6 |
|
I was in the Sox dugout. I'm their Bat_Boy you know.
Chappy
|
88.589 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:35 | 10 |
| Mike,
I gots to ask you.
How could you and your heart-in-the-homeland father, see all of that through the
Bushmill's haze?
Enquiring Scottish minds and all that,
'Saw
|
88.590 | A toughie coming at yer! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:38 | 18 |
| Contest #2 - find the change.
Explain it's meaning
;^)
================================================================================
Note 88.588 Boston Red Sox 588 of 589
WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "No.3 looms over Fenway....." 6 lines 13-AUG-1993 14:33
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I was in the Sox dugout. I'm their Bad_Boy you know.
Chappy
|
88.591 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:41 | 6 |
|
Plagiarism your in trouble now Kev!!!!
Chap
|
88.592 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:42 | 16 |
|
> How could you and your heart-in-the-homeland father, see all of that through the
> Bushmill's haze?
If they thought Greenwell had a shot at catching that ball off The Wall
in the 8th, they weren't able to (that sucker was about 15 feet up)!
Rollward, though! ;-)
MikeL, I ended up finding one in Section 26, a little inside third
base. I was thinking (for about two seconds ;-) about looking for
you and/or Billl, but the crowds were too thick and just too much a
hassle to deal with, with my daughter in tow. Thought I might see
Billl down below under LF at some point, but I didn't...
glenn
|
88.593 | and L.A. Law too! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:52 | 17 |
|
Chap,
I hope this helps.....
Dat weren't plagiarism. I didn't steel your work and present it as
mine. You steel got full credit.
However, perhaps you were thinking of "slander"???????
(isfh)
I remain,
a big Perry Mason fan!
Kev
|
88.594 | | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:53 | 13 |
| 15' up on the wall?
From our angle, it looked like it hit the base! And that was section
consensus.
Well you know the third and fourth thing to go is depth and height
perception, and it was at night you know and I hadn't eaten me
carrots...
And no, I had no Bushmills... during the game. 8^)
MikeL
|
88.596 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the LAWSUIT begins........ | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:55 | 11 |
| I used to value Glenn's opinion before he got some Red Sox eyeglasses
for patriots day. After April he has lost all common sense when it
comes to facts concerning other baseball teams and their players.
Let's face it, Glenn has Red Sox Pennant Fever or RSPF if you must.
In fact, a lot of former knowledgeable baseball people in New England
have this symptom. I can't wait until September when this RSPF finally
goes away like the green leaves of summer....
REK
I *WON'T* even start about canines.....................
|
88.598 | #24 was mah hero... | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is one year old!!! | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:11 | 3 |
| Willie Mays >>>>> Mickey Mantle!!!!
Even comparing them is like saying Ginger is beter than MaryAnn - hrumppff.
|
88.599 | | MKFSB::LONG | Are we having fun yet? | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:16 | 15 |
| Glenn I was perched in section 30 row 4 for the night. Thar was no
was in hail I was gonna pay $3.25 fer a dixie cup fulla Miller Lite!
We had a cooler full om the way down and after the game. The only
thing that got me outa the seat was the "recycling procedure", if'n
yunz know what I mean. It was a looooong game, too!
re ball off wall in 8th:
ball was at least 15 ft up the wall when it hit. I thought Greenwell
did a hell of a job decoying Wade "where's Margo" Boggs and keeping
him from scoring.
billl
|
88.600 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:31 | 35 |
|
> Sure, facts and figures and heated discussions about pennant races
> make good barroom and water cooler fodder but this in depth analysis and
> psycho-analysis of games, teams and players, as if it were something more
> than what it is - a game, is a little bit much.
I think most of the jousting of the past few days, which has
concentrated more on pennant race and less on facts and figures, has
highlighted the fact that it's a game, and that's fun. And don't lay
this in-depth analysis rap solely at baseball's feet, if it's a problem
you have in general with sports. The level of discussion in here has not
*come close* to approaching that around the NBA playoffs at that time of
year, with the myriad of stats and formulas flying around in proof that
KJ is the best point guard in the game, or whatnot. Not even close.
Once again, it boils down to which sports you like or don't. I think
basketball has become overanalyzed, myself, especially considering that
by the very nature of the game as an intricate team sport that it is
inherently non-statistical.
REK, I will bash the Red Sox and especially their management with the
best of them, and I still believe that the Sox are within a
two-out-of-three-losses weekend to the Blue Jays from becoming a
pretty darn good longshot once again. I'm just not a crank. I don't
believe that every Red Sox player stinks the minute he puts on the
home whites (and then becomes a good player again only when he makes
the Sox look bad after they've dumped him to another team). I don't
believe that there's a magical curse on Fenway Park and that it must
be torn down before they can win again. I don't make such erudite and
classy statements such as "this team will never go anywhere until the
old witch is dead and buried" (by the way, Mrs. Yawkey is dead now, but
you haven't changed your tune). No, I do not believe that the Boston
Red Sox are the evil incarnate.
glenn
|
88.601 | kept it to one sentence too! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:43 | 19 |
| Yabbut Glen,
Lasted weeks SI had a paragraph in the Boston Red Sox Hype_article
(courtesy JD) about one of the sox guys tossing his bat and having it
land on top of another bat and the final shape of the two bats was a
perfect cross and he was quoted as saying that that would end the
"curse", obviously referring to the what everybody knows is the curse
of the Bambino so I don't see how you can ignore the fact that even if
you don't believe in the existence of the curse that fact remains that
the players do and since they do, it obviously does and since it does,
they are effected by it and that they'll never win the big one until
the site of the curse is exorcised and forever removed.
hth!
I remain,
a once sentence wonder
Kev
|
88.602 | add this "n". I lost the other one somewhere | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:44 | 1 |
|
|
88.604 | ESPN in particular has fomented the "garbage stat" revolution | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:58 | 21 |
|
> In baseball you hear it during broadcast after
> broadcast. You get a batters average for every conceivable situation
> and then some. And just when you thought they couldn't come up with
> a new stat, they do. And then you've got people like "The Maniacal
> One" Chuck Waleski who's able to make a living out of tracking Sox
> stats and he comes up with facts and figures that *no one* else would
> have ever thought of. And the sad part is that he used to do it as
> a "hobby".
Oh, I agree with this part wholeheartedly. 95% of the stats which you
refer to are completely meaningless, and are only used by people who
have no idea what they mean and are just trying to fill air time. But
I don't think that should be used as evidence of the "sorry state of
the game" or whatever, nor that analysis in general is bad, just as
some know-nothing talking heads on basketball telecasts shouldn't
detract from your appreciation of the beauties of that sport. Once
again, go out to the ballpark! (Not you REK, everyone else... ;-)
glenn
|
88.605 | | LAGUNA::MAY_BR | squished tomatoes | Fri Aug 13 1993 17:38 | 11 |
|
OK, besides being the truth, what's different about this line:
> <<< Note
> 88.601 by CSTEAM::FARLEY "Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes!" >>>
> I remain,
> a once sentient wonder,
> Kev
|
88.606 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Everybody hurts... sometimes... | Fri Aug 13 1993 17:45 | 2 |
| It's correct English?
|
88.607 | Clemens loses another BIG GAME | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '93 | Sun Aug 15 1993 19:31 | 5 |
| So MikeC waddya think about that manly, gutsy, big game performance by
your mnain man Roger - not! Twice in 4 days, you must be ecstatic.
The Crazy Met
|
88.608 | I think you had to be there | AKOCOA::BREEN | The Last Pennant Race | Mon Aug 16 1993 00:15 | 11 |
| Mickey Mantle will always be my number one all time greatest ball
player notwithstanding the babe.
His 55,56,57 seasons in a pitcher's league are incomparable.
The consensus during the 50s would have been with Mantle but then again
a lot of that is sportwriter's hype.
He would be my first draft choice sauf perhaps Koufax
b
|
88.609 | ya inserted a "c" ????? ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Mon Aug 16 1993 09:23 | 1 |
|
|
88.610 | Fenway what a nice place!!!!!!!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Mon Aug 16 1993 11:35 | 15 |
|
I don't wanna be accused of being a front runner so I won't
gloat over the YANKEE sweep over Baltimore this weekend. :-)
How do you guys feel about the classy way the Sox fans
treated Roger yesterday as he was leaving the game? So Yankee fans are
obnoxious and unclassy huh?
I mean Roger is only 1 of the top 20 best pitchers of all
time!
Chappy
|
88.611 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Aug 16 1993 11:45 | 18 |
|
>> How do you guys feel about the classy way the Sox fans treated
>> Roger yesterday as he was leaving the game?
The fans at Fenway covered themselves in shame yesterday when
they booed Roger. He ain't pitching like the best pitcher in
baseball by a longshot but the guy has compiled some amazing
numbers at Fenway and for the longest time was the only Red
Sock worth the price of admission all by himself. No one knows
what Roger thinks but Roger, but that swift kick in the ass while
he's down had to hurt. Of course, if he goes out and throws a
two hit, twelve k shutout in his next appearance at Fenway, they'll
give him a standing O. Fickle bastards.
>> So Yankee fans are obnoxious and unclassy huh?
Yes.
|
88.612 | Re-posted from RED_SOX with my own permission... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 16 1993 11:54 | 18 |
|
>> How do you guys feel about the classy way the Sox fans treated
>> Roger yesterday as he was leaving the game?
Sort of along the same lines, I was also at the park yesterday and I
was absolutely sickened by the booing that Clemens took when he came
off the field. I've heard Clemens booed before; there's always a
smattering after a bad start from a few sick, frustrated individuals,
but the level that I heard yesterday really did surprise me. I lost a
lot of respect for the average Fenway-goer yesterday. To start with,
literally half the pitchers in baseball would flat refuse to take the
ball on three days rest like that in an emergency, but that shouldn't
even matter. Not after this career. I won't forget what I saw and
heard yesterday, and I don't expect that Clemens will, either. How
could he?
glenn
|
88.613 | he's a_innocent victim! ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Mon Aug 16 1993 12:06 | 10 |
|
Personally I think Ol' Rog is just an innocent victim of a plot by the
ClemsonUmps to get back at him for his little escapade lasted year!
Anybody can see that he's being forced to work with a strike zone
no bigger than a postage stamp!
I remain,
knowing it's a conspiracy!
Kev
|
88.614 | what an expert | FRETZ::HEISER | beat them until morale improves | Mon Aug 16 1993 13:24 | 4 |
| > That discussion was between Mike Heiser ('nuff said) and one or two
> fantasy league players (a get-a-life activity if ever there was one
Tommy just has expert opinions on all sorts of stuff.
|
88.615 | (8^) | PFSVAX::JACOB | | Mon Aug 16 1993 16:30 | 8 |
| re Clemens
Yer only as good as yer lasted outing, right??
SO, Rojah sucks, right??
JaKe
|
88.616 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Mon Aug 16 1993 17:00 | 3 |
| Is MikeC on vacation??
The Crazy Met
|
88.618 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 16 1993 18:49 | 18 |
|
> His 55,56,57 seasons in a pitcher's league are incomparable.
>
> The consensus during the 50s would have been with Mantle but then again
> a lot of that is sportwriter's hype.
Right on the money again, Mr. Breen. Mays' best seasons really did not
compare with Mantle's peak in the mid- to late-1950s. It's tough to
top Triple Crown seasons with a batting average in the .360s.
I think many regard Mays as the greater player because of his staying
power. No less a great New York sportswriter than Leonard Koppett,
upon his recent admission into the HOF, stated that day in and day out
that Mays was the greatest ballplayer he'd seen in the long period he'd
covered the game. I guess it depends on how you look at it...
glenn
|
88.619 | ya know, the stickball thang, etc. | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is one year old!!! | Mon Aug 16 1993 18:56 | 3 |
| I guess I was captivated by the sheer talent and love of the game that
Mys displayed on the field. I still think that he was unparelled in
tht regard.
|
88.621 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Aug 17 1993 12:12 | 5 |
| �Enjoy the Sox good fortunes this year. :-) cuz with
� that stocked minor league farm system of theirs you might not see a
� rivalry for the next few years.
Well, we haven't seen one for at least 10 years anyway.
|
88.622 | ELVIS SIGHTING | SKEWED::MCKAY | | Tue Aug 17 1993 12:12 | 3 |
| Mikey C is in a class for a few days. It's my turn to watch him!!!!
Jimbo
|
88.623 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Aug 17 1993 13:26 | 5 |
| � Speaking of credibility, you still convinced Wade's doing nothing for
� your guys, Chap? That .350 BA/.450 OBP since he moved to the leadoff
� spot hasn't made a difference?
Probably explains Donbo's resurgance.
|
88.624 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | The Last Pennant Race | Tue Aug 17 1993 14:37 | 19 |
| Glenn,
Willy was a tremendous day in, day out ball player.
But, in a game I had to win Mantle would by my man. Do you recall his
homerun off of Koufax to tie the game in 63. Can't recall if that was
the famous Joe (I lost the ball in the daylight) Pepitone game or not.
btw, on the subject (raised by SI ) of great games the 2nd and 3rd
playoff games in 62 between Dodgers and Giants are truly classics
(somehow forgotten classics).
Another thought: Try looking up the career of Robin Roberts for
similarities with Clemons. Robin was washed up in 59 but luckily came
back with AL O's for 4 or 5 more good seasons salvaging his hof. But
there was a good pitcher like Clemons suddenly losing it when fastball
couldn't do the trick alone.
Bill
|
88.625 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Tue Aug 17 1993 14:39 | 8 |
|
re:fastball pitchers
Seaver after his injury in 1974 - I believe - became more than just
a fastball pitcher. He always had a great curve ball, but he started
to pitch more than just throw.
The Crazy Met
|
88.626 | to sox fans everywhere | TRCOA::TRCP90::ahmed | Politically Incorect Message | Tue Aug 17 1993 16:47 | 14 |
|
Querry?
Is there a single position player on the SOX who could crack the
Jays starting lineup?
Just askin,
Nadeem
|
88.627 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Tue Aug 17 1993 16:59 | 19 |
| > Querry?
>
> Is there a single position player on the SOX who could crack the
>
> Jays starting lineup?
>
I would think so. It's not like the Jays are running away with it like
some other teams have done in years past. It's not like they are blowing
out team after team.
They're not above a Sox-like move of trying to buy a pennant (cf Rickey
Henderson), so yeah, there's probably a player on the Sox who could
crack the startin' lineup....
'saw
|
88.629 | Who - be specific | TRCOA::TRCP90::ahmed | Politically Incorect Message | Tue Aug 17 1993 17:06 | 18 |
|
'Saw - Name the position and the person!
The Jays are dedicated to winning from the front office
to the field. Getting Rickey isn't buying a pennent, it
is good management.
If we did that and were in the red, i would say it is bad
management. The Jays front office is accepted as the best
in baseball.
Nadeem
|
88.630 | It is just a game | TRCOA::TRCP90::ahmed | Politically Incorect Message | Tue Aug 17 1993 17:11 | 17 |
|
One more point, it would be tough for Jays pitchers -
Given their inconsistency this year to crack the
Red's starting rotation. I wasn't jibin the Reds just
their lack of talented position players vs. the
Jays quantity of same. The comment about the lineup
was made by the Managing Editor of SI (a huge sox fan) on
a local radio show here in T.O. (home of the world series champs)
Nadeem
|
88.631 | | CAM3::WAY | Sweet Home Chicago | Tue Aug 17 1993 17:18 | 21 |
| What's with this "who" shit, eh? 8^)
I dunno. Read my note. I didn't say I knew WHO. I just said that's it's
likely someone could. Maybe it's only the bat boy, I dunno.....
Ricky Henderson is typical move to try and solidify a teams chances. All
kinds of sports teams do this and I don't buy this "If you're in the red
it's bad, in the black it's okay". You're trying to buy that last piece
of the puzzle to sew it all up....
Tommy:
Koko Taylor -- that's WHO 8^)
'Saw
|
88.632 | | CNTROL::HUBER | File and Forget | Tue Aug 17 1993 17:20 | 18 |
|
Re Sox who would start for Toronto...
Let's see...
1B - Vaughn or Olerud - Olerud by a fair amount
2B - Fletcher or Alomar - Alomar by a mile
SS - Valentin or Fernandez - Fernandez in a squeaker
3B - Cooper or Sprague - Cooper
RF - Calderon/Quintana or Carter - Carter, easily
CF - Hatcher or White - White, though Hatcher has had a good year
LF - Greenwell or Henderson - Henderson, without a question
C - Pena or Borders - Borders by a large margin
DH - Dawson or Molitor - Molitor by quite a bit
Cooper's about the only one who'd start over a Blue Jay
Joe
|
88.633 | | CAM3::WAY | Roller Derby Roolz | Tue Aug 17 1993 17:27 | 4 |
| See, I told you....
[many 8^)]
|
88.634 | They come to town, eat our food, steal our women, spit on us... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 17 1993 17:37 | 15 |
|
I'd take Cooper and Valentin. I think Fernandez is on his last legs,
offensively and defensively, and if the Jays had had a player of even
Valentin's generally average ability available to them earlier this
year, there's no way that they'd have re-acquired Fernandez.
Yeah, so the Blue Jays are superior to the Red Sox. So what. As the
'Sawmain had to tell Chappy last week, show some respect, for god's
sake. Leave us Sox fans to our misery. We don't need to get our
brains beat in and then have to hear how none of our players would be
allowed across the Canadian border without an escort. We already
know! ;-)
glenn
|
88.635 | | CAM3::WAY | Roller Derby Roolz | Tue Aug 17 1993 17:51 | 4 |
| Well put, Glenn.
'Saw
|
88.636 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Tue Aug 17 1993 18:00 | 6 |
| well Glenn got it right about the food and the spit.
:-)
:-)
The Crazy Met
|
88.637 | gongtime???? | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Wed Aug 18 1993 10:41 | 11 |
|
After a 3 hour rain delay, the sox lost da game.
Sele's dropped his second in a row, despite 9 hits by the home team.
Of course, the hits came at the wrong time.
I remain,
not remembering the score or much else the radion said
Kev
|
88.638 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Aug 18 1993 10:52 | 4 |
| Sox lost 3-2 and dropped to 4-� games back. The Sox offense has come
back to reality proving what a bunch of boobs Sox management were for
not going after Barry "I'll get your team to the postseason by myself"
Bonds.
|
88.639 | | CAM3::WAY | Wang Dang Doodle | Wed Aug 18 1993 11:07 | 21 |
| It's August folks.
The dog days aren't here (I think we had those in mid-July), and I'm not
bored with life yet, but it is still August.
August is that month where thoughts start turning to the big Labor Day
picnic, and you scurry to make plans to fill the last weekends of summer
with some fun things that make memories to carry you through winter.
August is that month where there are no holidays, but you can squeeze
some vacation in to get out of the office. It's that month where all
the grass is brown except the grass on the golf course.
Ah, August. It's the month when the Red Sox fold, and start to fade
away.......
Yes, it's August folks.....
'Saw
|
88.640 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Hey... what's going on? | Wed Aug 18 1993 11:12 | 2 |
| Sox are what, 4 games ahead of the Tigers?
|
88.642 | | CAM3::WAY | Wang Dang Doodle | Wed Aug 18 1993 11:17 | 10 |
| > But even if they don't heat up again, this wasn't as bad a season as
> we all thought it would be back in the early spring. Sit back and
> enjoy whatever the rest of the season may bring.
So basically, we're either gonna hear Koko sing "You Got Me Crying", or
"Wang Dang Doodle", right?
Sounds good to me.....
|
88.643 | That musta smarted | TRCOA::TRCP90::ahmed | Politically Incorect Message | Wed Aug 18 1993 11:32 | 6 |
|
Was that the sound of an ankle breaking as you jumped off
the bandwagon.
Nadeem
|
88.644 | | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Wed Aug 18 1993 11:38 | 17 |
| All this talk of '67 was media hype anyhoo ( hear that JD!!).
I'm enjoying this year immensely. This team has kindled the fire in
Bosox fans all over, making our summer a leetle exciting.
While mgt might deserve criticism for not getting thisw team help
in going after the gonfalon( they're still ot out of it), the players
deserve our respexct and applause. This team is playing flat out
every night. The lack odf talent is just showeing through, that's all.
And while you will hear thuds as fair-weather fans fall off the
bandwagon, the majority of Red Sox fans will salute the players
and continue to enjoy the season.
And who's giving up yet? Go Red Sox.
Unabashedly,
MikeL
|
88.645 | It's been fun, I appeciated it, but now reality has set in... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 18 1993 11:46 | 38 |
|
> Sox are what, 4 games ahead of the Tigers?
Yep, and six in the loss column. The Tigers aren't gaining any
ground on the leaders; they're losing it too. Both teams have to be
considered longshots now, with the Tigers falling into the "astronomical"
category. But they can certainly catch the Sox...
Realistically, no matter what you expected from the Sox at the beginning
of the year or even a month ago, it looks like it's over. And I'm not
saying that in a negativist, off-the-bandwagon way. This team was on
the margin and needed whatever luck and homefield advantage it could
summon against the top contenders on this homestand. They haven't
gotten it. Meanwhile, Toronto doesn't play *any* winning teams until
mid-September, and the Sox have only three games left with them (and four
with the Yanks). It would take something like another 25-of-30 stretch
at this point, because Toronto won't lose 13 of 14 again, nor will the
Yanks as well. It's just not going to happen. I enjoyed it while it
lasted, and won't get down on the *players* who made it happen for a
while over these last two months.
Management is another story. They bought themselves nothing but time this
year. They face a whole bunch of hard decisions in the off-season, because
this team has almost *nothing* in the hitting department (Mo Vaughn is
about it to build a decent offense around), and I'll bet my bottom
dollar that once again they won't be up to those hard decisions. You
gonna rely on Andre Dawson to get younger again next year and finally
"come around"? Billy Hatcher to have another career year, and play CF
again at age 34? Scott Fletcher? Another Ivan Calderon-type pickup?
Plus, I anxiously await the off-season to see who this year's Jeff
Bagwell, Ellis Burks, or Phil Plantier will be. This is still the real
frustration with me, with management, in making the talent decisions.
You have to have some talent! I don't mind the recent losing on the
field so much in itself, not at all. Management set this course into
action last winter...
glenn
|
88.646 | It ain't over yet | TRCOA::TRCP90::ahmed | Politically Incorect Message | Wed Aug 18 1993 12:01 | 38 |
|
The way things have been going in the AL East I would'nt count
yourselves out. I still think that whoever is hotest last will
win it.
As for NY, they have been playing over their heads and are due
for a mild slump. The Jays pitching is still suspect. And Boltimore
- well I could never figure them out. It will be a great race,
let's just enjoy it.
Even though the Jays will Win!!
|
88.647 | That reminds me | TRCOA::TRCP90::ahmed | Politically Incorect Message | Wed Aug 18 1993 12:03 | 42 |
|
Your comment about the SOX reminded me of an old joke here in T.O.
What to the Jays and the Leafs have in common?
They both fold in September!
(bofore the Jays won W.S. and leafs made it to semi's)
:)
Nadeem
|
88.649 | | CAM3::WAY | Wang Dang Doodle | Wed Aug 18 1993 12:06 | 24 |
| Nadeem, dude....
I NEVER jump off the Red Sox bandwagon. Never. And despite any appearances
of a fold, and my little "August essay", I never, ever give up hope.
I've been a Red Sox fan since 1966, and my dad indoctrinated me into the
Red Sox - Yankees rivalry, because lots of his friends were Yankee fans.
In fact, one of his buddies owned the grocery store where we shopped, and
all during the summer of 1967 I can remember going in there, and
one of the two guys would be pinging on the other about something from the
most recent Sox-Yanks game....
But lets face it. August is the month that historically the Sox have
folded, so I had to put something in about that....
The Sox CAN regroup and just might do so....
Go Sox!
'Saw
|
88.650 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Aug 18 1993 12:08 | 6 |
| Glenn,
weren't you making comparisons to 1967 not so long ago??
The Crazy Met
|
88.651 | It's official: ACC Chris is off the RedFlops bandwagon. (sorry) | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Wed Aug 18 1993 12:13 | 1 |
|
|
88.652 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Aug 18 1993 12:14 | 3 |
| �The Jays pitching is still suspect.
Not any more. They recently signed Matt Young.
|
88.653 | For those dullards out there | TRCOA::TRCP90::ahmed | Politically Incorect Message | Wed Aug 18 1993 12:18 | 20 |
|
To explain the Rib Tickler!
The Jays had a reputation of choking in September
And the Leafs (Hockey season starts in September) were out
of it before the season began.
An analogy in Boston would be:
What do the SOX and the Patriots have in common?
They both fold in August!
Now that is funnnnnnnny!
Nadeem
|
88.654 | Do you disagree, TCM? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 18 1993 12:21 | 18 |
|
> weren't you making comparisons to 1967 not so long ago??
The only statement I made pertaining to the 1967 Red Sox was that *if*
this team were to pull off a pennant that it would be, based on the
talent they put on the field at the beginning of the season, as
improbable as the pennant win in 1967. I'll stand by that. Actually,
the 1967 Red Sox had much more talent than this bunch; it's just that
it finally came into bloom in 1967 after many losing Red Sox seasons.
The 1967 Red Sox didn't have to win the pennant with the 14th-best
offense in a 14-team league (that's *dead last* at the current time,
for those not statistically inclined).
*If*. A very big *if*. I'm not so stupid as to predict such a thing.
glenn
|
88.655 | glenn denies stupidity!!!! Film @ 11:00 ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Wed Aug 18 1993 13:02 | 1 |
|
|
88.656 | | USCTR1::KING | Key West, where the LAWSUIT begins........ | Wed Aug 18 1993 13:10 | 4 |
| Glenm don't sell yourself so short, you can be that stupid
if you want to!!!! :-}
REk
|
88.657 | what a year that was! | FRETZ::HEISER | one more song | Wed Aug 18 1993 13:12 | 1 |
| ...and IF Rice was healthy in '75, Boston would've won the Series.
|
88.658 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Aug 18 1993 13:13 | 3 |
| Wasn't Lynn the one who was injured in 1975??
The Crazy Met
|
88.659 | | FRETZ::HEISER | one more song | Wed Aug 18 1993 13:16 | 2 |
| Nope. Freddie hit a 3-run shot in the infamous game 6 (so did Bernie
Carbo).
|
88.660 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Aug 18 1993 13:17 | 8 |
| TCM, you really should become more knowledgable of the fans and teams
you love to bash.
Tony Conigliaro was beaned in 1967.
Jim Rice injured his wrist prior to the 1975 World Series.
HTH
|
88.661 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Aug 18 1993 13:19 | 3 |
| and there I go defending Mac in 132.23 - teach me to try and be nice.
The Crazy Met
|
88.662 | the real culprit should stay in the ACC | CNTROL::CHILDS | Vo-La-Ray-Oh-Oh-Can-Sa-Ray-WowWow | Wed Aug 18 1993 13:22 | 8 |
|
If the Soxs should get hot, I think the jumping on and jumping off the
wagon by Ack Ack, could be consider as the major reason why they slumped.
This PC VD stuff must be getting to me cause I didn't have it in me to
kick Rog while he's down and out after he'd been booed.
mike
|
88.663 | Rice as in Donna? | TRCOA::TRCP90::ahmed | Politically Incorect Message | Wed Aug 18 1993 14:24 | 8 |
|
>> ...and IF Rice was healthy in '75, Boston would've won the Series.
Yeah, and If my Aunt had balls she'd be my Uncle.
Nadeem
|
88.664 | a rookie tandem not yet equaled | FRETZ::HEISER | one more song | Wed Aug 18 1993 14:26 | 3 |
| Rice's injury even made the RoY voting a no-brainer. It would've been
much more interesting to see how it would've gone if Lynn & Rice played
the whole season.
|
88.665 | No offense,Sox below top echelon | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Wed Aug 18 1993 14:53 | 9 |
| The Boston Red Sox are quite simply a team with one or two offensive
threats and a very deep pitching staff. this combo was good enough to
run off a great hot streak against the lower echelon of the AL.
This past week they met the best in the AL and have fallen short
because their weak offense cannot get them through against the top
teams.
|
88.666 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:03 | 6 |
| re: .662
Oh no MikeC is becoming a "sensitive" type of guy. JaKe, MikeC needs
serious help.
The Crazy Met
|
88.667 | | CAM3::WAY | She said I'm her putz | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:19 | 15 |
| You know I really get a kick out of all these "fans" of other times
coming out of the woodwork to take shots at the Red Sox.
Now mind you, when their teams were mired in the depths of the cellar,
or had dry spells year after year, we never heard from them at all.
Nary a peep.
Now all of a sudden, they're thick around us like instant converts at the
second coming.....
[lots o' 8^)]
'Saw
|
88.668 | | MKFSB::LONG | All gave some, some gave all | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:31 | 13 |
| Rat on Frank!
As a diehard Pgh Pirate fan, Ah been sittin' back watchin' this on-
again, off-again with a bit of humor. Kinda like sitting in San
Fran watching the trolley cars.
In the professional area it just doesn't make sense to take a
"holier than thou" attitude towards other teams. Cause like that
old wise man once said, "What comes around goes around!"
billl
|
88.670 | BTW, if Sox start winning again, I'm back on the 'wagon. | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:37 | 1 |
|
|
88.671 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:40 | 16 |
|
Somehow I knew MikeC would be big about this whole Clemens fiasco.
I've got to commend him for that kind of restraint...
> You know I really get a kick out of all these "fans" of other times
> co ming out of the woodwork to take shots at the Red Sox.
Yeah, I know. And it's not like we haven't grown out of that stage where
we jump down the Mets' fans' throats every time Dwight Gooden crashes and
burns, either, like he did yesterday in his full bombastic glory, totally
coincidentally and barely even worth mentioning except for the purposes of
making this point. We have moved beyond that, we really have...
glenn
|
88.672 | | CAM3::WAY | She said I'm her putz | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:47 | 21 |
| Tommy --
Touch� man, you got me.....
> Yeah, I know. And it's not like we haven't grown out of that stage where
> we jump down the Mets' fans' throats every time Dwight Gooden crashes and
> burns, either, like he did yesterday in his full bombastic glory, totally
> coincidentally and barely even worth mentioning except for the purposes of
> making this point. We have moved beyond that, we really have...
But I haven't done that Glenn. I've busted on the stupidity of Coleman
and Saberhagen, but I haven't been on Gooden or stuff like that.
Hey, the Mets suck this year, but I haven't forgotten 1986....(shudder,
shudder).....
'Saw
|
88.673 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:55 | 7 |
| Yeah Gooden did pitch badly yesterday. oh well; sh*t happens.
But at this point during the year it is a lot more fun watching the
hype about the Red Sox - both ways - than figuring out what day
the Me(t)s(s) willbe mathematically eliminated from the race.
The Crazy Met
|
88.674 | | DECWET::METZGER | Non-alcoholic beer. What's the point? | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:57 | 18 |
|
Hey Billl,
You been reading too much Doctor Suess? That's what the p-name sounds like...
Hop on Pop and such...
BTw - IggNorr...who cares if you're on the bandwagon or not?
Any objective person knew that the Sox were vastly overachieving with thier
current offensive lineup. Much in the same way the O's were overachieving with
theirs. Pitching kept both teams in it and while great pitching beats great
hitting, good pitching can't stop great hitting...
There way no way the Sox were going to continue to hit over .350 with men in
scoring position when the team batting average must be around .270 or so...
Metz
|
88.675 | | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Aug 19 1993 10:15 | 26 |
| Danny Darwin comes sooooooo close to the no-no, great pitching
performance.. The new "ace" comes through. Got dat Rog?? 8^)
Speakin' of the Mutts, heard a great line on Imus this AM.
They ran a piece on Frank Tanana, who stated that he was very
happy playing for the Mutts and why would he want to leave...
Comment from Mike Breen , the sportsmain was good, " Lessee,
Tanana's 6-12, plays for the abominable Mets. Yeah, life couldn't
be better."
Ya gots me thinking about '75. Yeah, Rice woulda been a great addition,
but would he have made a diff? Conjecture of course, but let's look
at '75.
In the OF the Sox had Yaz, Lynn, and Evans. Ain't gonna mess with dat
nohow. At first base ya had Cecil Cooper, albeit before Coop became
a hitting machine in Brewtown. Whaddya do wif Rice? DH at Fenway_a_
course ( was they doing the DH in the American League park then, and
pitcher hitting in Cinci??). And where does he play in Cinci??
Take Coop outta the lineup against lefty Norman, put Yaz on first
and Rice in LF.?? IMO, that would weaken two positions. At that
point, I don't believe Yaz had played much first ( could be wrong)
and Rice was not an adept LFer. PH on road??
MikeL
|
88.676 | | CAM3::WAY | She said I'm *her* putz | Thu Aug 19 1993 10:44 | 11 |
| > Danny Darwin comes sooooooo close to the no-no, great pitching
> performance.. The new "ace" comes through. Got dat Rog?? 8^)
Jeezum Crow, even I could have gotten my rather ample butt up higher for
that ball than Hatcher did.... That sucked.
'Saw
|
88.677 | Not much question that Rice would've played... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 19 1993 11:33 | 27 |
|
> In the OF the Sox had Yaz, Lynn, and Evans. Ain't gonna mess with dat
> nohow. At first base ya had Cecil Cooper, albeit before Coop became
> a hitting machine in Brewtown. Whaddya do wif Rice? DH at Fenway_a_
> course ( was they doing the DH in the American League park then, and
> pitcher hitting in Cinci??). And where does he play in Cinci??
> Take Coop outta the lineup against lefty Norman, put Yaz on first
> and Rice in LF.?? IMO, that would weaken two positions. At that
> point, I don't believe Yaz had played much first ( could be wrong)
> and Rice was not an adept LFer. PH on road??
There was no DH at all in the World Series then. But as I recall, Rice
had displaced Yaz as the regular LF in 1975. Yaz spent a lot of time
at DH, and some at first. Much was made of the fact that he had come
back and taken control of his old position when he threw out those Oakland
baserunners in the ALCS. There definitely would have been a positional
crunch on in the World Series, but I think that Cecil Cooper would have
been the primary man out, as you said against the lefty Norman but
particularly the nasty Don Gullett. I think Cooper went something like
1-for-21 in the Series and was one of the few Sox (maybe along with Bill
Lee) to be bestowed a pair of goat horns in that great classic. Most
everyone else hit well, so who knows what difference Rice would have
made inserted in place of this one hole? It's a legitimate "what if"
question for frustrated Sox fans...
glenn
|
88.678 | seems like it was the same as now | FRETZ::HEISER | one more song | Thu Aug 19 1993 12:09 | 1 |
| I thought Bernie Carbo was the DH in the Fenway games.
|
88.679 | | CAM3::WAY | She said I'm *her* putz | Thu Aug 19 1993 12:16 | 4 |
| > I thought Bernie Carbo was the DH in the Fenway games.
Let me check Total Baseball tonight and I'll see what it says in there.....
|
88.680 | DH in 75 (AL park only??) or was Carbo PH? | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Aug 19 1993 12:29 | 9 |
|
I dunno glenn, I think they allowed the DH in the AL Park (Carbo, yes)
inb 75.
Anyhoo, your recollection on Rice is probav
bly right. I thinbk he did play left (mostly) till his injury.
MikeL
|
88.681 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 19 1993 12:36 | 11 |
|
> I dunno glenn, I think they allowed the DH in the AL Park (Carbo, yes)
> in 75.
Carbo's famous HR in Game 6 was a pinch-hit job. The DH wasn't used in
the World Series at all until 1976, I think, and even then was only
used in alternating years until 10 years later. The homepark rule is a
relatively recent one.
glenn
|
88.683 | | CAM3::WAY | She said I'm *her* putz | Thu Aug 19 1993 13:03 | 15 |
| > Didn't Yaz usually choke in the clutch? Saw a clip of him the other
> night, during the rain delay, boo-hooing about not getting a fair shake
> after making the last out to end the series ('67? '75?).
Yaz made the last out in the 1978 playoff game against the Yankees, a pop
up to the infield.
I don't recall Yaz choking in the clutch. I remember him as a guy who
came to play, day in, day out, and got the job done. I remember him
being the go-to guy when they needed something, and he definitely was
the leader of the team....
'Saw
|
88.685 | Even worse than the Clemens "big game" reputation | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 19 1993 13:52 | 30 |
|
Yaz did the job and then some in the 1967 World Series, with a high
average and a few homers as I recall. He was the offensive star for
the Sox. Lonborg got shelled in Game 7 coming back on two days rest,
and that was that. Yaz did make the last out in that game, but it was
academic.
In 1975, Yaz owned the A's and was ALCS MVP, I believe. I don't
think he had a great Series, and again he made the last out, with no
one on and two outs in the 9th. He's been quoted that he was trying to
hit the ball out, which was a reasonable decision under the (bleak)
circumstances, and he did manage a moderately deep fly to center, but
it wasn't near enough.
In the 1978 playoff, Yaz hit a home run off Guidry, had two hits, and
drove in a couple runs. Again, he made the last out of the game, but
this time it was a much bigger deal, against Goose Gossage with the
tying run on third. Even though he had a very good game, the best of
the Sox' lineup, this was the at-bat from his entire career that hurt
the most.
All in all, the idea that Yaz was a choker in the big games would be
the clouded "boyhood memory". Yeah, I've heard the stuff about
making the last out in 1967, 1975, and 1978, and obviously Yaz is
sensitive to it, but that "last out" thing is strictly Little League
stuff. It really mattered *once*, but in the truest Red Sox' tradition
has overshadowed an excellent postseason career for many.
glenn
|
88.687 | Basically, I can get them, if you're even interested... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 19 1993 14:03 | 10 |
|
> So, basically, you *don't* have his stats.
Not at my fingertips, but I can get them. I can assure you that
they're good, with the possible exception of the 1975 World Series
specifically. What are you inferring, that I'm making it all up?
You're not known as a stats guy, Tommy... ;-)
glenn
|
88.689 | Ain't doubtin' Reggie, but what else? | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Aug 19 1993 14:18 | 20 |
| What's your point Tommy?
Is it that Yaz was a choker or a latter-day whiner?
His last at bat in 1978 sticks in many people's minds unfortunately,
but ask Mr. October himself if he thought Yaz was a clutch performer.
And I don't have stats either, but all I recall is a mammoth game 6 vs
LA in 1977 for Reggie. Do you have other examples from Jackson ( and
don't point to the 78 playoff game when his HR put the Yanks up 5-2,
remember that Yaz' HR put the Sox up 1-0. Same stuff.)?
MikeL
Or are you saying that Jackson was a better performer in the clutch
than Yaz?
|
88.691 | Just don't forget that teams win or lose, not single players | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 19 1993 14:33 | 12 |
|
Reggie had *great* World Series numbers, and lousy playoff series
numbers. You can rationalize that dichotomy any way you wish, and it
still won't really fit. The bottom line is that the winners are
glorified, and the losers villified, even though there usually isn't
any clear-cut pattern to any of it. If it's your turn, and you respond
to the moment, you're going to be the hero. The next year or the next
series (or more appropriate to Yaz' individual case the next at-bat)
you might just as easily fall on your face.
glenn
|
88.692 | | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Aug 19 1993 14:39 | 27 |
|
Well make sure you ask Reggie when he's sipping his Salada. 8^)
I believe he's stated in interviews how much he respecxted Yaz and
he did think Yaz was a clutch performer.
Now I'm also not disputing the claim that Reggie was a better clutch
player than Yaz, but that does not mean that Yaz=choker, IMO.
And I asked for some shining examplers of Mr. October's brilliance
not to put you on the spot, but because I honestly cain't recall
any besides 1977, even tho I'm sure they exist.
Hmmmm, Rice batting for Yaz... vewy interesting hypotheses me main.
I don't recall how Yaz fared in the 75 series overall, but after
his immense ALCS, don't think Johnson woulda dared, nor do I
think it would have been merited, if you look at Yaz' proven
performance at that time in his career. I think Coop would have
sat, because in '75, he hit as well as Tony Pena did this year.
Coop obviuosly hadn't developed offensively yet ( so let's trade
him for Gentle Ben!!).
Now if you had said sit Dewey Evans for Rice if you needed some
"O" on occasion, that would be interesting also. Evans, while
a teror defensively, was a below-average hitter in 75.
Vewy interesting...
MikeL
|
88.694 | I didn't mean that to sound so cliche, I really didn't | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 19 1993 15:10 | 10 |
|
>> -< Just don't forget that teams win or lose, not single players >-
>
> I'll try and remember that, Gil Thorpe.
Well, if you honestly believe that Yaz was a big reason the Sox haven't
won anything in your lifetime, you need to remember it! ;-)
glenn
|
88.695 | | CAM3::WAY | She said I'm *her* putz | Thu Aug 19 1993 15:28 | 14 |
| |>> -< Just don't forget that teams win or lose, not single players >-
|>
|> I'll try and remember that, Gil Thorpe.
|
| Well, if you honestly believe that Yaz was a big reason the Sox haven't
| won anything in your lifetime, you need to remember it! ;-)
First off, Tommy must be having one of those days like he had last
Friday, when he came into the OPP and told us something....
Second, Gil Thorpe is a great comic strip....
'Saw
|
88.697 | No choker in my book | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Thu Aug 19 1993 15:57 | 3 |
| What I'll always remember about Yaz was his 7 for 8 performance against
the Twins in the final two games of the 1967 season that helped the sox
win the pennant.
|
88.699 | ;-) | FRETZ::HEISER | one more song | Thu Aug 19 1993 16:23 | 1 |
| Yaz should've went to ASU like Reggie.
|
88.701 | | MKFSB::LONG | All gave some, some gave all | Thu Aug 19 1993 16:28 | 5 |
| Gee Tommy, don't hold back. Tell us what you really think.
billl
|
88.702 | What the heck do you mean by "choker" then, anyway? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 19 1993 16:45 | 19 |
|
>> Well, if you honestly believe that Yaz was a big reason the Sox haven't
>> won anything in your lifetime, you need to remember it! ;-)
>
> Glenn, I never said any such thing. Sherlock Holmes couldn't draw
> conclusions from as flimsy evidence as you're using. It it NOT my
> contention that Yaz is a reason, nevermind a big reason, why the
> Sox never won a championship. I'd simply like to see his stats
> as proof that he was not a choker.
I thought my conclusion was self-evident, given how close the Sox
came three times during Yaz' career (within one game in 1967, within
one run in 1975, within one run of the eventual champ in 1978). In
fact, I thought you were making that point explicitly: if Yaz hadn't
choked in the decisive games, then he'd have brought home the ring.
Almost by definition.
glenn
|
88.704 | suffice?? | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Thu Aug 19 1993 17:16 | 7 |
| How's about this.
Yaz was an average to good post-season player, not nearly as good
as Reggie but much better than Bondo.
MikeL
|
88.705 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Thu Aug 19 1993 17:21 | 7 |
|
Glen wasn't Yaz one of the worst #3 hitters of all time?
:-)
Chappy
|
88.706 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Aug 19 1993 17:22 | 2 |
|
I'd still like to see some proof for myself.
|
88.707 | "Proof" ain't a Waugamain long suit. (Obfuscation is though) | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Thu Aug 19 1993 17:43 | 7 |
| Mr.Brydie don't expect too much from glenn. He cain't even answer a
simple question over in 21.
You expect statistics to back up his anecdotal "proof"?! Ha!
- ACC Chris
|
88.708 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 19 1993 18:28 | 17 |
|
> -< "Proof" ain't a Waugamain long suit. (Obfuscation is though) >-
Yeah, right. As if liberalism, "Slick Willy", and hypotheticals
around my ideals are germane to the topic of Dean Smith lining his
pockets with fast shoe bucks, and greed run rampant in the NCAA in
general.
Gotcha, Tommy. I wasn't accusing you of blaming solely Yaz, in any
case. I just said "a big reason". I figured that if you were calling
the team star, a future HOFer, and actually the most productive player
in a couple of those big series to boot a "choker" and a "whiner",
that you felt strongly about it and that it qualified as "big". But I
*will* get the numbers and let you decide for yourself.
glenn
|
88.709 | and dream about seeing dean in a nighty... | DECWET::METZGER | Come and play, everything's A OK. | Thu Aug 19 1993 18:28 | 7 |
|
Crisp is so lonely over in note 21 he's stopping into the Sox note to try and
drum up some hate so that he'll have somebody to talk with about the ACC.
get thee back into note 21 and continue talking to yourself...
Metz
|
88.710 | | CAM3::WAY | Dreams I'll Never See | Fri Aug 20 1993 09:47 | 16 |
| Of *course* Gil Thorpe is fluff. If I want substance I'll go to a bookstore.
If I want a daily sports soap opera I'll either come to the junk note
in here or check out Gil Thorpe.
But these days I don't get the paper during the week, only on Saturday
and Sunday, so I only see Gil Thorpe once a week on Saturday. He's not
in our Sunday paper....
Basically, the strips I read regularly are "The Far Side", "Calvin & Hobbes",
"Non Sequiter", and "Outland".....
Red Sox lost last night 5-1. Even Yaz couldn't have helped them....8^)
'Saw
|
88.711 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | | Fri Aug 20 1993 09:52 | 17 |
|
>>Basically, the strips I read regularly are "The Far Side", "Calvin & Hobbes",
>>"Non Sequiter", and "Outland".....
Ye read the "Outland" a few weeks ago wehre Outland is sitting there
with his buddies telling "stupid wimmen" jokes, and the women comes
over and gives them hell fer doing it, saying that they don't
appreciate the other half of society, and telling them that they should
take a long hard look at what makes their horrible little lives
bearable and hat really brings them happines(or sumthin like that)
and in the last panel, Outland and his buddies are all looking down the
front of their underwear.
Guess ya gotta see it, but it's hilarious.
JaKe
|
88.713 | | CAM3::WAY | Dreams I'll Never See | Fri Aug 20 1993 10:00 | 13 |
| >
> This is the Red Sox note not the comic strip note. Please take all
> discussions of comic strips and cartoon characters where they belong,
> in the Mets note.
Watch it Tommy, or Mac will get mad at you for stepping on his "I'm your
mother" role.
The Mets have their own comic strip -- Saberhagen and Coleman.....8^)
'Saw
|
88.714 | If the Sox win *once*, Yaz goes down as a great clutch player ;-( | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 10:09 | 44 |
|
Okay, as promised, the numbers. Yaz' are even better than I had
thought. Being a Red Sox, he only got the shot at the three
postseason series, but he excelled in each one, and on the whole
(career postseason .369 BA, .600 SLG pct.). Jackson appeared in 16
career postseason series (11 ALCS, 5 WS), and has a very good but
not spectacular (not in the league of Ruth, Mantle, etc.) overall
record. The overall record is very much in line with his career
regular-season performance, which is not surprising over that high
number of series, and at-bats. The 1977 World Series has carried his
reputation. That's taking nothing away from him; it was probably the
greatest World Series performance of all time and he should rightly be
remembered for it, but that one series is really where your "Mr.
October" comes from (take heart, Mr. Bonds).
Yaz AB R H BI 2B 3B HR BB SO AVG OBP SLG
1975 ALCS 11 4 5 2 1 0 1 1 1 .455 .500 .818
---------------------------------------------------------------
1967 WS 25 4 10 5 2 0 3 4 1 .400 .483 .840
1975 WS 29 7 9 4 0 0 0 4 1 .310 .394 .310
---------------------------------------------------------------
WS Total 54 11 19 9 2 0 3 8 2 .352 .435 .556
---------------------------------------------------------------
Post Tot 65 15 24 11 3 0 4 9 3 .369 .446 .600
Jackson AB R H BI 2B 3B HR BB SO AVG OBP SLG
ALCS Tot 163 16 37 20 7 0 6 17 41 .227 .300 .380
WS Total 98 21 35 24 7 1 10 15 24 .357 .442 .755
---------------------------------------------------------------
Post Tot 261 37 72 44 14 1 16 32 65 .276 .355 .521
Also, for fun, the ill-fated 1978 one-game playoff (a regular season
game in the books):
AB R H BI 2B 3B HR BB SO AVG OBP SLG
Yaz 5 2 2 2 0 0 1 0 .400 .400 1.000
Jackson 4 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 .250 .250 1.000
glenn
|
88.715 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Aug 20 1993 10:31 | 5 |
| �Watch it Tommy, or Mac will get mad at you for stepping on his "I'm your
�mother" role.
Not at all. It warms my heart to see that there are folks out there
who do want to talk sports.
|
88.716 | | CAM3::WAY | Dreams I'll Never See | Fri Aug 20 1993 10:41 | 13 |
| >
> Not at all. It warms my heart to see that there are folks out there
> who do want to talk sports.
As Sonny Boy Williamson would say "Don't start me to talkin'...."
Otherwise, I'll have to dredge out my "Sports as a Microcosm of Life"
essay and post it.....
[lotsa 8^)]
|
88.718 | Just goes to show that people will believe whatever they want | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 11:44 | 25 |
|
> Of course, those cold hard numbers (that I asked for) don't tell us
> exactly what the situations were when Yaz got his hits. We already know
> for a fact that he did not come through on the three biggest at bats
> of his career and ended the three biggest games of his career meekly.
> Also 3 HRs (zero in 1975, the year that started this whole debate) and
> 9 RBIs in 54 WS at bats is pretty damn anemic for the team's premier
> offensive threat.
I could have guessed it would come to this. First off, there was *one*
"biggest" at-bat, the one against Gossage. No one denies this. It was
a huge moment, and Yaz didn't come through, in this one single incredibly
big at-bat of his career (on the other hand, the last at-bat of the 1967
World Series in a 7-2 game hardly would be one the "three biggest at bats
of his career". It wouldn't even be in the top 100. The two at-bats
in the 1978 playoff alone, where he hit the home run for a 1-0 lead, and
drove in the 4th run to cut the game to 5-4 were much bigger). Secondly,
3 HRs and 9 RBIs in 54 World Series at-bats projects to 30+ HR, 100+ RBI
over a full regular season, and this is coming against championship-caliber
competition. Pretty damn anemic? Hardly (and Yaz was not the team's
"premier offensive threat" in 1975, in any case).
glenn
|
88.720 | Yes, excelling. And a far cry from "choking"... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 12:03 | 15 |
|
> Do you mean like believing that zero extra base hits in 29 ABs
> in the '75 World Series is "excelling"? I wonder what that
> projects to over a full season.
The game is won in more than one way. The guy hit .310, with a
near-.400 OBP in his *worst* postseason series, allowing him to score 7
runs in 7 games. He wasn't the key guy on that particular Red Sox team
anyway but he was still in the middle of the run-scoring.
Should we take Reggie Jackson's worst performance in a single series
and draw such conclusions? It wouldn't be pretty...
glenn
|
88.722 | Still a Tiger fan. | KAOFS::R_OBAS | | Fri Aug 20 1993 12:39 | 11 |
|
"This park (Fenway) is a safe place for fans and players of the team
playing against the Red Sox"
From the CBC t.v. sportscaster of the recently concluded 3 game
series between the jaYs and red sox.
Sounds good to me. Is there still a series between the Tigers and
Red Sox at Fenway for this season ? I'll drive down and watch a game.
ricardo
|
88.723 | Were that there were more Red Sox like Yaz in the "big games" | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 12:39 | 32 |
|
> Yaz did not elevate his game in his
> two World Series appearances. He was not a big game performer.
If you want to make the ipso facto declaration that because his team
didn't win, Yaz didn't get it done, then you've got no argument. But
with all due respect, if you believe the line below isn't "elevating
his game", then you need to get a clue. You wanted stats, then you
decided you didn't like stats, so we can talk situations if you like.
Yaz damn near won each of the three games that the Sox won in the 1967
Series singlehandedly with his 3 home runs and his .400 hitting, and he
was a key contributor to the the 1975 Series, past his prime, at 36
years of age, up against one of the greatest teams of all time. At 39
he put up the *best* effort of all the Sox in the 1978 playoff, while
the supposed young studs like Jim Rice put in their 1-for-5s with a
single, stranding runners all over the place. Thank god for Rice that
he flied out with the tying run in scoring position before Yaz came to
bat! Yaz performed well in the big games; there's absolutely no question
about it:
Yaz AB R H BI 2B 3B HR BB SO AVG OBP SLG
---------------------------------------------------------------
WS Total 54 11 19 9 2 0 3 8 2 .352 .435 .556
---------------------------------------------------------------
By the way, how do you explain Jackson's abysmal performances in the
ALCS, presumably "when his team needed it", especially in the *five*
series that his team didn't advance?
glenn
|
88.724 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 12:52 | 8 |
|
> Sounds good to me. Is there still a series between the Tigers and
> Red Sox at Fenway for this season ? I'll drive down and watch a game.
Yep, Monday Sept. 27-30, four games. Should be plenty of tickets left.
glenn
|
88.725 | (8^) | PFSVAX::JACOB | | Fri Aug 20 1993 13:13 | 8 |
| >>Not at all. It warms my heart to see that there are folks out there
Mac,
You actually HAVE a heart??????????????
JaKe
|
88.726 | Gracias' Glenn.... | KAOFS::R_OBAS | | Fri Aug 20 1993 13:16 | 1 |
|
|
88.728 | Bottom line Reggie>YAZ>Dean | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 20 1993 14:21 | 6 |
|
Just win BABY....
Reggie 5 rings
Yaz 0 rings.
|
88.729 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | | Fri Aug 20 1993 14:32 | 8 |
| REggie Jackson was the most overrated player of the centrury.
So big deal, he did well in October. His career numbers, other than
his HR's, most of which were PROBABLY meaningless, sucked harder than a
Shop Vac.
JaKe
|
88.730 | Now THOSE are kick ass #'s aren't they? | RAAJI::MORGAN | O, O, O, O, O, .OOO | Fri Aug 20 1993 14:36 | 3 |
| Chappy, see the Personal Name above. Don Mattingly's postseason stats.
Steve
|
88.731 | Stupid Mcnupid | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Fri Aug 20 1993 14:40 | 8 |
|
How did we get from Jackson to Yaz to Mattingly.
Chappy
|
88.732 | Another instance of myth over fact | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Reggie Lewis - R.I.P. | Fri Aug 20 1993 14:41 | 11 |
| As few people know, but most writers and sports afficionados should
realize, Jackson was hardly "Mr. October". Just look at his stats.
He played in 11 League Championship Series. His batting average for
45 games was a measly .227, with only 6 home runs and 20 rbi. He had
one great World Series, for the Yankies in 1977 with 5 HR and a .450
average. For his other four World series appearances, he batted .310,
.286, .391, and .333 - very good but not great. He hit 5 home runs and
had 16 rbis.
NAZZ
|
88.733 | Stone Hands Jackson(tm) | FRETZ::HEISER | one more song | Fri Aug 20 1993 14:41 | 4 |
| Russell > Reggie
I still get a giggle out of the image of Reggie muffing that fly ball
in right field during the '81 World Series vs. the Dodgers.
|
88.734 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Aug 20 1993 14:47 | 6 |
| � No, I'd like to make the statement that because he had zip-zilch-
� zero extra base hits in the '75 WS, he didn't get it done. Thanks,
� for the 9 singles, cap but amazingly it weren't enough.
At least he's consistent. He doesn't like that alleged singles hitter,
Wade Boggs, either.
|
88.735 | | CAM3::WAY | Dreams I'll Never See | Fri Aug 20 1993 14:49 | 44 |
| Wow, Tommy, man, I've never seen you this testy.
Bottom line, everyone is falling into that trap of believing that
a single player makes a difference.
Nothing that Yaz did in those three at-bats can be termed "choking".
YOu wanna talk choke, talk Bill Buckner, or Bill Stanely AND Rich Gedman.
Choking is when you've got something and you lose it, like the Sox did
in 1986. When you're behind and making an effort to win and fall short,
that's not choking, at least not in my book.
And the thing that's even more laughable to me is that we sit here, and
we throw our stats around, and throw our opinions and memories around,
and hide in the mantle of our fandom, be it Yankee Blue or Red Sox Red,
and use terms like choke, or excel. Hell, I don't think one of us
in here could go out there and face a Goose Gossage fastball with a
most important game on the line and do any better. So who are we to
say someone choked.
I'm a big boy, but I seriously doubt I could hit a baseball as far
as Reggie Jackson did in October of 1977. I know I couldn't hit some
of the shots that Yaz hit, and I know that in a lot of the games I saw
him, regular season games in a sport where the regular season means something
(tho' not for very much longer) Yaz was the go-to guy, and got it done.
I seriously wonder if I could do that as much as he did.
So to me, this discussion is about as meaningless as discussing how many
angels can dance on the head of a pin. You can't measure a career
by three at-bats any more than you're boss can measure your yearly
performance by picking three days out of the year....
Gee, maybe I'm the one who's testy today....8^)
'Saw
|
88.739 | | CAM3::WAY | Dreams I'll Never See | Fri Aug 20 1993 15:02 | 16 |
| > I ain't "testy". Actually, I'm enjoying myself. Before I started
> this "discussion" the only thing going on in these here parts was
> that dry-hump fest over in 27.
Well, I cain't help it if you stopped talking blues, man.....
I was perfectly happy talking about the blues....
But, as long as you're enjoying yourself, note on, my man, note on!
'saw
|
88.740 | And this is what Sports talk is all about | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Aug 20 1993 15:03 | 6 |
| �So to me, this discussion is about as meaningless as discussing how many
�angels can dance on the head of a pin. You can't measure a career
�by three at-bats any more than you're boss can measure your yearly
�performance by picking three days out of the year....
But it is a nice change from the Junk Note and the Dean worship.
|
88.741 | Yeah, I'm having a lot of fun, too... ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 15:53 | 18 |
|
>> For his other four World series appearances, he batted .310,
>> .286, .391, and .333 - very good but not great. He hit 5 home
>> runs and had 16 rbis.
>
> Ok, so Yaz hits .310 in a WS (all singles) and that's excelling.
> Reggie hits .391 and that's very good but not great. Okey dokey.
But who are you to talk? Per your description of Yaz' lifetime WS
numbers of .352, 3 HR, 9 RBIs in two series (as opposed to the four
above) as "pretty damn anemic", then Reggie's non-1977 performances
must be downright pathetic. At least Nazz is in the ballpark. And you
still haven't answered the question of where Reggie was in the 11 ALCS
appearances, especially the 5 that his team lost. I keep track of that
kind of thing. I have to, with Chris IgKnorr running loose...
glenn
|
88.743 | Compliment accepted! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 15:58 | 1 |
|
|
88.744 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Fri Aug 20 1993 16:02 | 5 |
| re: .742
smiley's help.
The Crazy Met
|
88.746 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Aug 20 1993 16:25 | 29 |
|
>> But who are you to talk? Per your description of Yaz' lifetime WS
>> numbers of .352, 3 HR, 9 RBIs in two series (as opposed to the four
>> above) as "pretty damn anemic", then Reggie's non-1977 performances
>> must be downright pathetic.
.391, .310 and .333 aren't pathetic by any measure and especially not
compared to Yaz' .310 performance (all singles for you folks just tuning
in). I guess whether or not you "excel" depends in large part on what
uniform you're wearing. And yes compared to Reggie's numbers and the
numbers of a select few other greats Yaz' *are* "pretty anemic". You're
projected numbers of 30 HRs and 100 RBI are "very good but not great".
Those are not "hop on my back and I'll carry you" numbers.
>> At least Nazz is in the ballpark.
Translation - Nazz and I see eye to eye.
>> And you still haven't answered the question of where Reggie was in
>> the 11 ALCS appearances, especially the 5 that his team lost. I keep
>> track of that kind of thing.
Irrelevant and immaterial. By your numbers, the man and his teams are
6-5 in ALCS' and 5-1 in WS. Not too, shabby. Sheer coincidence that
Reggie has been in so many post-season games? The man was a winner.
Yaz wasn't. Post-season-wise, Yaz is sway-back old nag and Reggie is
a thoroughbred.
|
88.747 | Just fer you, Tommy===> (8^) | PFSVAX::JACOB | | Fri Aug 20 1993 16:45 | 26 |
|
>> "So big deal, he did well in October"? Ain't you the guy that's always
>> boo-hooing about Barry Bonds' post-season performances? I'd say that
>> you're never satisfied but heaven knows what kind of string of notes
>> that'd lead to.
Dooo-Meeee Doooooo-Meeeeeee, Tommy.
So Reggie was the media's proclaimed "Mr. October".
SO Barry Bonds is proclaimed by billl Mr. October_NOT.
Bonds has played great in the regular season, but when he came up fer
the Bucs, he played like a scared puppy.
This will probably be the year that Bonds breaks out of it in the
playoffs, since he's out of Pittsburgh.
I think Bonds is the best all-around player in the game right now, but
I also think he's a freakin' spoiled brat.
Never satisfied....Only my wife knows fer sure.
JaKe
|
88.748 | "Swayback nag"? MrT woulda come up w/ something more original ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:04 | 31 |
|
> Irrelevant and immaterial. By your numbers, the man and his teams are
> 6-5 in ALCS' and 5-1 in WS.
Well, 4-1 in the WS actually (you should study up on this stuff before
making false claims, you know), but I'll give credit to Reggie as a
"winner" for knowing how to sit on the bench with a busted leg while
his teammates brought it all home for the first time. A more vindictive
type might say that this proved that his talented A's teams could win
with or without him.
> Sheer coincidence that
> Reggie has been in so many post-season games? The man was a winner.
It's not coincidence. It actually highlights a good point that
Reggie's regular-season accomplishments are *underrated*, and by
extension his postseason accomplishments somewhat overrated. The
man doesn't get enough credit for hitting 550+ career HR in the
regular season.
> Those are not "hop on my back and I'll carry you" numbers.
Only Reggie's 1977 and Yaz' 1967 WS performances are of that high
distinction, on either side. Reggie's team won, and Yaz' didn't.
Which pretty much confirms my original point that, for you, Yaz is
to be blamed simply for not doing whatever it took to win it all,
his actual performance and those of his teammates notwithstanding.
And you accused me of an exaggerated leap of logic! ;-)
glenn
|
88.749 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:08 | 13 |
|
>>It's not coincidence. It actually highlights a good point that
>>Reggie's regular-season accomplishments are *underrated*, and by
>>extension his postseason accomplishments somewhat overrated. The
>>man doesn't get enough credit for hitting 550+ career HR in the
>>regular season.
If ya call holding the major league record for most times struck out
, leading the league in errors 3 consecutive seasons, and a measly .250's
career average "underrated".
JaKe
|
88.750 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:08 | 5 |
| Tommy, you seem to be ignoring the fact that Yaz singles and walks
resulted in 11 runs scoring for the Sox (7 scored, 4 batted in).
That's productive no matter how many total bases Yaz racked up.
|
88.751 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:21 | 17 |
|
>> Only Reggie's 1977 and Yaz' 1967 WS performances are of that high
>> distinction, on either side.
Don't try and lump Yaz' '67 performance in with Reggie's '77. So
far, all we have as proof that Yaz almost single-handedly won
three games in that series is your say so and that ain't hardly
good enough for me.
BTW - I ain't no Reggie Jackson fan either. The man't accomplishments
can't be denied but as a human being he was an egotistical bore
who will go down in history as giving the lamest Hall Of Fame
induction speech ever.
|
88.752 | I'm shocked and disturbed by such a lack of faith... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:31 | 21 |
|
> Don't try and lump Yaz' '67 performance in with Reggie's '77. So
> far, all we have as proof that Yaz almost single-handedly won
> three games in that series is your say so and that ain't hardly
> good enough for me.
Two homers in one win, one in another, and a BA over .500 in the three.
Trust me. Unfortunately, Bob Gibson pitched in three of the four other
games, and I'll be honest enough to tell you that *nobody*, including
Yaz, touched him (with the possible exception of mound counterpart Jose
Santiago, who hit a HR off him in Game 1 in a rare lapse by Gibson).
> BTW - I ain't no Reggie Jackson fan either. The man't accomplishments
> can't be denied but as a human being he was an egotistical bore
> who will go down in history as giving the lamest Hall Of Fame
> induction speech ever.
At least no one escapes your ever-growing wrath... ;-)
glenn
|
88.753 | | CAM3::WAY | Dreams I'll Never See | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:35 | 17 |
| > Two homers in one win, one in another, and a BA over .500 in the three.
> Trust me. Unfortunately, Bob Gibson pitched in three of the four other
> games, and I'll be honest enough to tell you that *nobody*, including
> Yaz, touched him (with the possible exception of mound counterpart Jose
> Santiago, who hit a HR off him in Game 1 in a rare lapse by Gibson).
Gibson was unconscious. I was 9 years old and in awe of what the man
could do....
> At least no one escapes your ever-growing wrath... ;-)
THE WRATH OF TOM!
|
88.754 | | PFSVAX::JACOB | | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:39 | 7 |
| Not to stray from the subject of Yaz and Reggie, but talking about Bob
Gibson, does anybody know what year it was that Roberto CLemente sent
one of Gibson's fastballs back at him harder than he threw it towards the
plate and ended GIbson's season wif a broken leg????
JaKe
|
88.755 | Lesssee, Oct31967,Yaz up 2on,1and2count,highfastball | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:40 | 9 |
| So Tommy,
Tell us how you feel about Russell vs Chamberlain..
Heed thine own moniker, Go out and Shove someone!!
8^)
MikeL
|
88.756 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:43 | 11 |
|
> Not to stray from the subject of Yaz and Reggie, but talking about Bob
> Gibson, does anybody know what year it was that Roberto CLemente sent
> one of Gibson's fastballs back at him harder than he threw it towards the
> plate and ended GIbson's season wif a broken leg????
1970, I think. And Gibbie came back the next year or the year after to
flat no-hit the Bucs in revenge...
glenn
|
88.757 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:52 | 18 |
|
>> Not to stray from the subject of Yaz and Reggie, but talking about Bob
>> Gibson, does anybody know what year it was that Roberto CLemente sent
>> one of Gibson's fastballs back at him harder than he threw it towards the
>> plate and ended GIbson's season wif a broken leg????
>
> 1970, I think. And Gibbie came back the next year or the year after to
> flat no-hit the Bucs in revenge...
No, on second thought, I think it was 1967 itself, because one of the
things I remember about that Series was the conventional wisdom that
Gibson was so overpowering in part because he'd missed a large chunk of
the season and was very fresh. Even though he put up the incredible 1.12
in 1968, he was less effective in the '68 Series, and the Tigers got to
him for the victory...
glenn
|
88.758 | Swept Away | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '93 | Sun Aug 22 1993 19:03 | 11 |
| Even the newest Red Sox "savior", Aaron Sele could not win today.
Indians complete a 4 game sweep of the Red Sox for the first time since
1960. Red Sox picked a heck of a time for a swoon, especially playing
at home. Of course the bright side is that the Red Sox won't break
their fans hearts this year, again.
At least Red Sox fans have a bright sides, some of us haven't had one
from our team since April. (Mets got swept in Colorado).
The Crazy Met
|
88.760 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Aug 23 1993 11:11 | 9 |
|
>> Two homers in one win, one in another, and a BA over .500 in the three.
>> Trust me.
Trust me? As much gall-danged time as you spend following baseball,
surely you can come up with something a little more substantial than
"Trust me". Those numbers alone don't indicate that he won "three
games almost by himself".
|
88.761 | Gibson | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Mon Aug 23 1993 11:25 | 16 |
| re Gibson:
I wouldn't call him "ineffective" in the 1968 WS.
He set a still standing WS record with 17 k's in game 1-shutting out
the Tigers on 4 hits and beating Denny McLain.
In game 4 he allowed 6 hits,struck out 11 and hit a homerun in an 11-1
blowout.
In game 7 he finally lost when Curt Flood misjudged a flyball in the
8th inning of a scoreless game. The Tigers tattooed him for 4 runs in a
4-1 victory. The star of the 1968 series was Mickey Lolich who won
three games,the last pitcher to do so in a world series.
|
88.762 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Aug 24 1993 10:04 | 3 |
|
I guess "less effective" is an incredibly relative term. Ain't that
right, "Trust me" Waugaman?
|
88.763 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 24 1993 10:26 | 33 |
|
Nice characterization of Sunday's game, TCM. Get a subtle dig in on
Aaron Sele when he was the only damned Red Sox (with the possible
exception of Rob Deer) to do his job, and do it very well. I don't
believe the kid will be the Red Sox' "savior" (that's too big a job),
but he sure as hell has been pitching like it. JD would be proud of
you...
I didn't say that Gibson was ineffective in 1968, just that he was less
effective than he had been in 1967, and the Tigers finally got ahold of
him in Game 7.
>> Two homers in one win, one in another, and a BA over .500 in the three.
>> Trust me.
>
> Trust me? As much gall-danged time as you spend following baseball,
> surely you can come up with something a little more substantial than
> "Trust me". Those numbers alone don't indicate that he won "three
> games almost by himself".
Okay, to the extent that Reggie supposedly "won" the 1977 World Series by
himself, so did Yaz "win" those three games. So Reggie hit one of his
4 straight homers starting at the end of a blowout *loss* in Game 5 and
then three more in the blowout clincher. A remarkable performance, to
be sure, but how many "clutch" homers does a team need to win a 8-3 game,
anyway? If the rest of the Yankees, already up in the series 3-2, had
waited until Game 6 to "climb on Reggie's back", the Series would have
already been over. I was evaluating Yaz' .400, 3 HR World Series
performance (that supposedly doesn't rate mention, even though it was
come-from-behind all the way, from down 1-0, and 3-1) in that context...
glenn
|
88.764 | By your standards, Gibson "choked"... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 24 1993 10:29 | 9 |
|
> I guess "less effective" is an incredibly relative term. Ain't that
> right, "Trust me" Waugaman?
Yes, "less" is an adjective of relation. So is "more", if you're
looking for help.
glenn
|
88.765 | | CAM3::WAY | Sex On The Pool Table with Heather | Tue Aug 24 1993 10:44 | 11 |
| I commend you gentlemen on your efforts here.
This discussion harkens back to the Golden Age of Sports, where great
debators debated, and great orators orated, and Sports was full of
polemic efforts.
MrT would be proud......
As am I,
'Saw
|
88.766 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Aug 24 1993 10:44 | 8 |
|
>> -< By your standards, Gibson "choked"... >-
Get real. Get serious. Get help. Re-read Lazarus' note. If that's
"Less effective" then my name is Rush Limbaugh.
|
88.767 | Still having a problem with that word "less", huh? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 24 1993 10:56 | 13 |
|
> Get real. Get serious. Get help. Re-read Lazarus' note. If that's
> "Less effective" then my name is Rush Limbaugh.
Look up his 1967 performance. I'm pretty sure it was a 3-hitter,
a 4-hitter, and a 6-hitter. And I *have* heard and read that Gibson
was worn out by that 1968 Game 7. Which was my only point, that in
1967 Gibson suffered the injury, got some time off, and I've seen that
mentioned as a reason he could be so overwhelmingly dominant in three
straight complete game starts that late in the season.
glenn
|
88.768 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Aug 24 1993 11:20 | 24 |
|
>> Look up his 1967 performance.
Ok. Right after I shave my head with a cheeze grater and rub it
down with isopropyl alcohol.
>> I'm pretty sure it was a 3-hitter, a 4-hitter, and a 6-hitter. And
Even allowing for your faulty memory, it seems to me that given this
performance:
"He set a still standing WS record with 17 k's in game 1-shutting out
the Tigers on 4 hits and beating Denny McLain. In game 4 he allowed 6
hits,struck out 11 and hit a homerun in an 11-1 blowout. In game 7 he
finally lost when Curt Flood misjudged a flyball in the 8th inning of a
scoreless game. The Tigers tattooed him for 4 runs in a 4-1 victory."
Allowing for Flood's misplay, Gibson was at least *as* effective, if not
more so in 1968. But this is way off on a tangent, the real issue is
Yaz performance in big games and it hasn't escaped my notice how much
minute detail we have seen on the '77 series where Reggie starred but
how sketchy the details are on the '67 series.
|
88.769 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Hey... what's going on? | Tue Aug 24 1993 12:17 | 3 |
| Safe to assume the Sox are now out of it? The Tigers were written off
as such, but they're a game behind Baltimore and Boston...
|
88.770 | It seems this woeful pathetic bunch is everyone's standard | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 24 1993 12:32 | 10 |
|
> Safe to assume the Sox are now out of it? The Tigers were written off
> as such, but they're a game behind Baltimore and Boston...
Yep, the Sox' chances too have been downgraded to astronomical. Do you
really get that much satisfaction from the prospects of finishing ahead
of Boston, Walt?
glenn
|
88.771 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Hey... what's going on? | Tue Aug 24 1993 12:38 | 3 |
| I do when I hear all the "Why do you root for a team like..." stuff
over and over again... how did TigerMania and LionsMania start anyway?
|
88.772 | I think RCASO and company are all gone... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:48 | 13 |
|
> I do when I hear all the "Why do you root for a team like..." stuff
> over and over again... how did TigerMania and LionsMania start anyway?
I don't know; I wasn't around then. But I have never questioned
anybody's allegiance to their team, and I haven't heard anyone else
doing it either lately, yet we're constantly reminded how far Team X
(Yankees, Indians, Tigers, etc.) is ahead/behind the Red Sox. As if
anyone should care where they stand against an object of such scorn and
ridicule...
glenn
|
88.773 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:49 | 9 |
| Wail, I don't particularly get any satisfaction when the Tigers finish
over the Sox and/or Yankmes, but at least I don't have to hear "Ha ha,
my (insert team of choice) finished ahead of the Tigers."
O'course, it does feel a lettle (as Gabby Hayes used to say) bit better
than if they had ended up as the great forecasters had them before the
season.
Lee
|
88.774 | Way too much goodwill here to constitute a great battle. :^( | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:50 | 25 |
| re: Waugamain vs. Brydie endless "debate"
This "Yaz is a Choker" hypothesis and the resulting endless stream of
useless notes reminds me of a similar "debate" I used to have with my
best friend when I was about 6:
"My dad is better than your dad."
"Is Not."
"Is Too."
"Is Not."
"Is Too."
(Repeat, ad infinitum.)
Bottom line: These boring notes between the two of you are nothing
more than a mawkish journalistic lovefest.
Yuk.
- ACC Chris
|
88.775 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:52 | 3 |
| I like the debate. Don't stop now.
Lee
|
88.776 | | CTHQ::LEARY | McSorley,McFilthy,McNasty | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:56 | 13 |
| HAHAHAHA Chris, you is rich, you dawg.
I was athinkin of a more recent debate over in the ACC note among
The Three Stooges.
MikeL
P.S.
I'm back on the Braves bandwagon there Crisp... How's dat fer a reverse
KOD (thanks fer Bosox KOD).
|
88.777 | Reggie -more than 1977 | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Wed Aug 25 1993 16:19 | 21 |
| I hate to continue this Yaz-Reggie LDUC but...
while Jackson's finest moment was unquestionably the 1977 WS,he did
hit a crucial two-run homer to help beat the Mets in game 7 of the 1973
WS,the Yankees haven't won a division title since he left while his
new team(California) won in his first seaon with them(1982). He added
to his lreputation in the 1978 WS when he avenged a game ending
strikeout in the second game by homering off Bob Welch in the clinching
6th game. It should be noted that Jackson was fortunate to have played
with several other clutch players on the A's,Rollie Fingers,Gene
Tenace,Catfish Hunter and Sal Bando as well as Graig Nettles,Thurman
Munson,Sparky Lyle and Chris Chambliss on the Yanks.
Like Joe Morgan and Don Baylor,winning teams seemed to find him and
vice-versa.
One comment about Yaz: I still rank his 1967 performance as one of the
greatest examples of one man carrying a team on his back. Noone has won
a triple crown since. Nuff said.
|
88.778 | | CAM3::WAY | The reducto absurdum of human experience | Wed Aug 25 1993 16:38 | 13 |
| > One comment about Yaz: I still rank his 1967 performance as one of the
> greatest examples of one man carrying a team on his back. Noone has won
> a triple crown since. Nuff said.
And he would have had the batting title in 1968 had Alex Johnson not
pulled a Wade Boggs.....
'Saw
|
88.779 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '93 | Wed Aug 25 1993 17:09 | 5 |
| Jackson hit a 2 run double in game 6 of the 1973 WS against Seaver. Is
that the hit you are referring to? He may have also hit a HR in game
7, but I seem to recall the A's led all the way in game 7.
The Crazy Met
|
88.780 | Jax fax | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Thu Aug 26 1993 11:20 | 3 |
| TCM-you may be right-but Jackson was excellent in those final two games
in oakland. Yaz did win the batting title in 1968-he was the only AL
batter over .300(,.301).
|
88.781 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Aug 26 1993 11:24 | 4 |
|
Dave, you don't have more detail on Yaz' '67 World Series
performance do you? Like final score and circumstances in
the games he hit his homers and such.
|
88.782 | Memory hazy | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Thu Aug 26 1993 11:44 | 7 |
| I believe he homered in game 2 -a 5-0 win on a one-hitter by Lonborg.
Sox won game 5 in St. Louis 2-1(Lonborg again). He homered once in an
8-4 romp in game 6,Petrocelli hit two. He couldn't have homered in game
4(a 6-0 loss, or game 1 a 2-1 loss where the only run was a homer by LP
Jose Santiago).
I'll check for certain.
|
88.783 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Aug 26 1993 11:46 | 2 |
|
Thanks. Very much appreciated.
|
88.784 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Aug 26 1993 14:53 | 9 |
|
*Two* homers, 4 RBIs in Game 2 (the 5-0 game). A tying solo homer in
Game 6 that was busted open later.
That's all I know, beyond that my memory's faulty, fire away...
glenn
|
88.785 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Aug 26 1993 14:54 | 2 |
|
So basically they could have won both games anyways?
|
88.786 | | CAM3::WAY | Wild Thing, I think I love you | Thu Aug 26 1993 15:03 | 5 |
| I think Tommy's just pissed at Yaz, because when Tommy was a kid he
asked the Make A Wish Foundation for a wish to meet Yaz, and they
told him, "No way kid"
'Saw
|
88.788 | BOTH! | FRETZ::HEISER | like kissin' thru a windowpane | Thu Aug 26 1993 15:24 | 2 |
| > I was kidding, Saw. Gee, I'm either going to have to start using smiley or
> stop being such a pain in the butt. Anyone have a preference?
|
88.789 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Aug 26 1993 15:35 | 2 |
|
Read the title of the note, Gomer.
|
88.790 | | CAM3::WAY | Wild Thing, I think I love you | Thu Aug 26 1993 15:50 | 12 |
| >
> Read the title of the note, Gomer.
>
Funny, I always thought of Mike as more like Goober than Gomer.
But gee, Tommy, since you do know Mike, I'll bow to your judgement....
8^) 8^) 8^) 8^)
'Saw
|
88.791 | :*) | GENRAL::WADE | Pull! | Thu Aug 26 1993 17:00 | 4 |
|
Who are you 'Saw? Floyd?
Claybone
|
88.792 | | CAM3::WAY | Wild Thing, I think I love you | Thu Aug 26 1993 17:21 | 10 |
| >
>
> Who are you 'Saw? Floyd?
No, I always fancied myself as Otis.....
(hic)
'Saw
|
88.793 | Oooh Andy.. I ... like your hair... | ROYALT::ASHE | Hey... what's going on? | Thu Aug 26 1993 17:38 | 2 |
| Better that than Floyd...
|
88.794 | | GENRAL::WADE | Pull! | Thu Aug 26 1993 17:47 | 4 |
|
Alright then, I wanna be Ernest T. Bass.
Claybone
|
88.795 | golldang and all that rot | FRETZ::HEISER | like kissin' thru a windowpane | Thu Aug 26 1993 18:52 | 1 |
| I was just gonna award Ernest T. to Tommy (what it stands for).
|
88.796 | I hate to interrupt Mayberry talk but... | AKOCOA::BREEN | The Last Pennant Race | Fri Aug 27 1993 00:24 | 8 |
| It was 1970 when Alex Johnson sat out the final game after getting a
hit in his first ab to put him out of reach of Yaz, A backing in of
Boggsian proportions
b
You want a true mr. october try pete rose or possibly look at
postseasons of Jim Palmer
|
88.797 | | CAM3::WAY | Wild Thing, I think I love you | Fri Aug 27 1993 10:15 | 12 |
| > It was 1970 when Alex Johnson sat out the final game after getting a
> hit in his first ab to put him out of reach of Yaz, A backing in of
> Boggsian proportions
Yes, I should have KNOWN. Plus, I've got the gosh darned World Alamanac
sitting two feet from me -- I could have looked in up in the interest
of accuracy.
I guess I AM getting old.....8^(
'Saw
|
88.798 | | 38728::CHILDS | ERS, cause everybody can't play U2 | Fri Aug 27 1993 10:24 | 14 |
|
Maybe Tommy got sick on a sandwhich made with Yaz bread and stuff with
Yaz kilbasi???
As a Soxs' fan maybe it's a deep rooted depression reaction to Yaz not
bring it all home when he was younger?
I know as a youngster I was sick of the Yaz hype. I mean some jumoaks
actually thought he was better than Teddy Ballgame...
big big hahaa
on that one
mike
|
88.799 | | CAM3::WAY | Wild Thing, I think I love you | Fri Aug 27 1993 10:27 | 7 |
| Yaz was very good. Ted Williams was GOD(tm).
'nuff said.
'Saw
|
88.800 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is one year old!!! | Fri Aug 27 1993 11:26 | 9 |
| Folks forget that Yaz had some years when he was nothing more than decent
offensively. In the oh, early 70s he was known to swing from his heels, go for
the long ball all the time, and have some pretty low BAs. He was also known as
the antithesis of the team player, looking out for himself, and not caring if
hsi team won or lost.
He started strong,and finished strong, and that is waht most fans remember...
=Bob=
|
88.801 | Yaz was GREAT | LUDWIG::GARRY | Dallas Cowboys back where they belong #1 | Fri Aug 27 1993 12:46 | 12 |
| re .798 Mike C
You got sick of the Yaz hype before most of us "younger" people were
even born.......Hell you were probably a senior in High School when
Williams hit .406.......Yaz was the last player that will EVER win
the triple crown...so enjoy the accolades that people give Yaz.
:') :') :')
By the way Mike C you are retiring soon...right??? :') :')
Tom
|
88.802 | gimme 2 of those Fenway franks | FRETZ::HEISER | like kissin' thru a windowpane | Fri Aug 27 1993 13:14 | 1 |
| I liked Yaz. Even liked Gulden's mustard.
|
88.803 | Yaz was great too, it's just that Williams was the greatest | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 27 1993 13:27 | 18 |
|
> Folks forget that Yaz had some years when he was nothing more than decent
> offensively.
Folks also don't realize that Yaz was *the* best hitter in the American
League of the 1960s and first couple years of the 1970s. Three-time
batting champ (near-miss on the fourth), four-time slugging champ (by
SLG percentage), five-time on-base champ. The man was no slouch with
the bat in his younger days, and he never really had a major decline as
so many great stars do in the final years, primarily because even at 44
years of age he was in tremendous physical shape. There's entirely too
much sentiment that Yaz was some kind of mediocre player who was the
beneficiary of freakish longevity. I attribute this to the very tough
and critical baseball atmosphere of Boston, and of course having to
succeed Ted Williams.
glenn
|
88.804 | | CAM3::WAY | Wild Thing, I think I love you | Fri Aug 27 1993 14:30 | 15 |
| Yeah, what Glenn said....
And regarding Mike Childs, he's not much older than I, if that much.
I started watching the Red Sox in 1966, which was about the same time
I started watching pro football and hockey.
I never had the fortune of watching Ted Williams play, but know lots
of folks who have seen him and have heard the stories.
Yaz won the triple crown, and very few players have ever done that.
Williams did it twice....
'Saw
|
88.805 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Fri Aug 27 1993 14:59 | 4 |
| A slump by Tony Gwynn and a hot streak by Barry Bonds could still
give Bonds the Triple Crown this year.
The Crazy Met
|
88.806 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Summer's gone - Football's here! | Fri Aug 27 1993 15:50 | 3 |
| Sandwiches made with Yaz bread always tasted better.
/Don
|
88.807 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Aug 30 1993 14:16 | 7 |
| One of Tommy's arguments against Yaz seems to stem from the fact that
Yaz played as well during the postseason as during the regular season,
thus not elevating his game. Don't you think it's a bit difficult for
a Triple Crown Winner to get better?
Now Reggie was a career .250 hitter. Doesn't take much to elevate
that.
|
88.808 | Stats/no stats make up yer mind | SALEM::DODA | Grip it, zip it and go find it | Mon Aug 30 1993 16:15 | 1 |
| Amen Mac.
|
88.809 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Aug 30 1993 16:51 | 10 |
|
> I believe he homered in game 2 -a 5-0 win on a one-hitter by Lonborg.
> Sox won game 5 in St. Louis 2-1(Lonborg again). He homered once in an
> 8-4 romp in game 6,Petrocelli hit two. He couldn't have homered in game
> 4(a 6-0 loss, or game 1 a 2-1 loss where the only run was a homer by LP
> Jose Santiago).
Obviously, Yaz padded his stats in games that the Sox won handily and
didn't come through when they really needed him. It ain't over 'til
the fat lady sings or Carl Yazstremski hits a weak popup.
|
88.810 | | MKFSB::LONG | All gave some, some gave all | Mon Aug 30 1993 17:20 | 10 |
| Hey, Tommy, this song has a familiar tune to it.....
Kinda sounds like 'burgh fans and Bonds == Tommy Brydie and Yaz.
Maybe the reason the others are having trouble seeing your point
is the same reason you could see mine or JaKe's.
hth,
billl
|
88.811 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Aug 30 1993 17:26 | 7 |
|
I don't disagree with you or Jake that Bonds didn't perform
well in the post-season. What I don't understand (among other
things) is why you guys ragged on him for it and then became
suicidal when he left. What's more, I will concede that Yaz
put up some good numbers during the post-season. Not game and/
or series winning numbers but some good ones.
|
88.812 | ever plant'm in a barrel? | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Tue Aug 31 1993 10:23 | 14 |
|
Yabbut I allus liked Yaz, even though I cared diddley about baseyball
mostly cause he's a native Lawn Guylander - Southhampton to be
potentially precise.
Da guy's a real potatoe farmer now, as was his daddy!
snort that!
I remain,
remembering October's a good month to harvest 'taters!
Kev
|
88.813 | An open letter of apology to Lou Gorman | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Ready Steady Go! | Wed Sep 01 1993 12:57 | 22 |
| Dear Lou. First and foremost let me state that I have been, am and
will always be a Red Sox fan. I subscribe to NESN and watch as many Sox
games as possible (until I fall asleep). But last night the allure of the
Braves/Giants game was too much to bear. I found myself clicking on
Teddy's WTBS station, just for a quick look see and became seduced. The
thought of baseball's best team (Braves) against baseball's best player
(Barry Bonds), the matchup of Swift against Maddux, Robby Thompson, Matt
Williams, David Justice, Ron Gant, Terry Pendleton, real baseball, real
grass, an excitable crowd... Well I became swept up in the emotion of it
all and said "The hell with the Sox, I'm watching this game!" (but honest
Lou, I was thinking of the Red Sox all the while I was watching WTBS).
What I thought was going to be a tight, exciting, all night contest
was over just like that. Before I knew it it was 5-1 Braves and just like
when I watch the Red Sox I rolled over and fell asleep. I'm sorry Lou! I
promise to go to more than one Red Sox game next year! I promise to stop
telling people that McCoy Stadium is more fun and better than Fenway!
Please forgive me! I promise never to watch that evil Teddy Turner station
anymore or look at that devilish temptress Jane ever again! Please Lou,
take me back!
/Ashamed_and_Contrite
|
88.814 | Rollward! | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Wed Sep 01 1993 13:09 | 1 |
|
|
88.815 | 10-15 lifetime vs Sox | SALEM::DODA | Grip it, zip it and go find it | Wed Sep 01 1993 14:35 | 6 |
| Nolan was quoted on Monday as saying that Yaztremski was the
toughest hitter he ever faced in his career.
FWIW
daryll
|
88.816 | Mike Childs Watch Day 2 | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Sep 02 1993 11:13 | 0 |
88.817 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '94 | Sun Sep 05 1993 00:29 | 4 |
| Clemens losing has gotten so routine, MikeC has no more case to prove.
The Crazy Met
|
88.818 | 10 - 12 !!!!!!! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's gonna wear maternity clothes! | Tue Sep 07 1993 09:31 | 1 |
|
|
88.819 | Bell rung | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Ready Steady Go! | Tue Sep 07 1993 13:16 | 7 |
| Mister Bell, meet Mister Vaughn! Got to be the highlight of the
year for me. After the Celtics' Robert Parish clocked Laimbeer in the
'87 playoffs he could never again do wrong by me. After last night
Mo Vaughn has ascended to that level of honor! Alright Mo! Somebody
give Mo's number to Parcells.
/Don
|
88.820 | Sele's mom didn't raise no dummies! | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Reggie Lewis - R.I.P. | Tue Sep 07 1993 13:40 | 5 |
| And how about the headfake by Sele!?!?!?!?!?! What a great move!!!!!!
He dodges Bell, and Mo levels him!!!!!!!! Must be nice for Sele to
know he's got big friends behind him.
NAZZ
|
88.821 | | SALEM::DODA | Grip it, zip it and go find it | Tue Sep 07 1993 16:17 | 3 |
| Wish the Pats had someone who could tackle like that....
daryll
|
88.822 | | ZEKE::SAIA | R.I.P. AMA/CCS #235 | Wed Sep 08 1993 12:52 | 10 |
|
Will MLB have a 'charging the mound' ejection penalty comming ?
Seems that everytime a ball is a little off course, the batters charge
like rhino's. After seeing Nolan Ryan put a hurtin on that baffon that
charged the mound, then Sele with the best Deke I've seen in awhile
with a follow through hit by Mo, whats next ? It's quite comical seeing
these guys try to fight.
|
88.823 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Hey... what's going on? | Wed Sep 08 1993 14:08 | 3 |
| Charging the mound won't do it... ban the guy coming off the bench
or 3rd man in...
|
88.824 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Sep 08 1993 15:08 | 3 |
| The Red Sox lead the league in batters hit by a pitch, yet I can't
recall a single instance this season where a Sox batter charged the
mound.
|
88.825 | it's probably what he does best this year anyways | 38728::CHILDS | ERS, cause everybody can't play U2 | Wed Sep 08 1993 15:26 | 5 |
|
When you already braindead it doesn't hurt as much Mac......besides Rog
has vowed retribution for his teammates. What a guy! What a team player!!!
mike
|
88.826 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Hey... what's going on? | Wed Sep 08 1993 16:43 | 2 |
| Maybe that's why they're 8 games out...
|
88.827 | After all is said and done | AKOCOA::BREEN | The Last Pennant Race | Fri Sep 10 1993 14:57 | 6 |
| Well here we are, 4 games out in the lost column. Sox went 52-66
without being this close, this late.
Perhaps it'l truly be over monday.
Baltimore looks best right now.
|
88.828 | :-) | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | No.3 looms over Fenway..... | Tue Sep 21 1993 10:26 | 11 |
|
BTW for the next 3 days...
GO GO RED SOX
FINEST TEAM IN THE LAND
GO GO RED SOX
KICK THE BLUE JAYS IN THE CAN...
CHAPPY
|
88.829 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Wins-NotBlueJersey&CrapLogo | Tue Sep 21 1993 18:30 | 3 |
| I hope they lose all 3 Chappy, just to tick you off...
/Don
|
88.830 | "I got too much on my mind", There's nothing to talk about" | 38728::CHILDS | ERS, cause everybody can't play U2 | Wed Sep 22 1993 09:14 | 6 |
|
>> I hope they lose all 3 Chappy, just to tick you off...
one down two to go /er'.............
mike
|
88.831 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Wed Sep 22 1993 10:48 | 8 |
|
Spineless Bobby Brown, the AL prez not Whitney's hubby, shot down the
Sox' protest because it was not lodged immediately after the play in
question. Way to go, Bob. Don't address the real problem. Don't show any
backbone by heavily fining the Yanks if not deliver a heavier blow and
take away a game from them when they're still somewhat in a pennant race.
Nope don't do any of those things just turn around so we can measure just
how wide that yellow streak running down your back really is.
|
88.832 | Ex-Yankee, Steinbrenner confidante Bobby Brown! ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 22 1993 10:54 | 1 |
|
|
88.833 | | MKFSA::LONG | All gave some, some gave all | Wed Sep 22 1993 11:33 | 16 |
| Since in American Legion baseball we use major league rules, I was
shocked to hear the way the Red Sox lodged this protest. I didn't
need no Bobby Brown to tell me they did it wrong.
Like it or not, the rules is the rules. I agree that something more
stringent should be done regarding people entering the playing field,
but that wasn't what Mr. Brown was dealing with. He was just ruling
on the "botched" protest.
My guess is that if the Sox had filed the protest correctly,
immediately, it would have been upheld. If'n you don't follow the
rules of the game don't bitch about the outcome.
billl
|
88.834 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Wed Sep 22 1993 11:48 | 14 |
|
>> I agree that something more stringent should be done regarding
>> people entering the playing field, but that wasn't what Mr. Brown
>> was dealing with. He was just ruling on the "botched" protest.
That's a cop out. Brown is supposed to be the league president.
If the league president isn't going to do squat about nuts running
amok on the field and there's not sitting commsioner then I guess
every weekend we'll have security getting a good workout chasing
fans around the field at Yankee Stadium. There's no argument that
Butch Hobson botched the protest badly but a recurrent phrase
that you hear in baseball when rulings are made is "for the good
of the game". The good of the game has been ill-served here.
|
88.835 | | ROYALT::ASHE | Color my world... | Wed Sep 22 1993 12:04 | 2 |
| You really surprised by this?
|
88.836 | | MKFSA::LONG | Jade's my fav, too! | Wed Sep 22 1993 12:13 | 3 |
| I said "suprised", but the more I think about it I'm appalled!
billl
|
88.837 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Sep 22 1993 12:16 | 5 |
| Actually, whether or not the protest was "botched" is open to
interpretation. The Sox claim that the last out of the game was made
when Stanley hit the ball, thus they had 24 hours to file. Brown ruled
that it wasn't really the last out and the protest had to filed before
the next pitch. Brown took the easy way out.
|
88.838 | To fall back on "rules" to do *nothing* is a cop-out... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 22 1993 12:24 | 35 |
|
> My guess is that if the Sox had filed the protest correctly,
> immediately, it would have been upheld.
On what grounds? You're kidding, right? Absolutely no way in hell
that the league would have upheld this protest under any circumstances.
An umpire calls time, that's it; it's a judgment call. The entire
intent of the protest was to register an official complaint on
the "fan participation" issue, for the principle of it. If the league
is that anal retentive about procedure, maybe the complaint should have
been registered in a form other than a game protest, if that's even
possible. But the league very easily could have rejected the protest
and then defined what actions it will take in the future when crowds
get out of hand and interrupt play. Lou Gorman and especially Butch
Hobson have made that point publicly on numerous occasions, that they
didn't expect to win the protest but wanted a clarification from the
league...
> If'n you don't follow the
> rules of the game don't bitch about the outcome.
The rules on the subject of fan disruption are in fact practically
non-existent. *That* is the issue. To tell you the truth, I'd take
some amount of perverse pleasure from this affair if it were to happen
again in this year's World Series and leave an important game like
that in doubt, for instance, since baseball simply refuses to deal with
day-to-day, on-field issues anymore. That includes the fighting issue
and everything else, where the current presidents continue to issue the
standard non-deterring penalties, suspend the penalty upon an appeal
process, reduce the penalties after the appeal process, by which time
the offending player may have already set the cycle in motion again.
Baseball's "rules" and "procedures" in these league matters are a joke...
glenn
|
88.839 | | MKFSA::LONG | Jade's my fav, too! | Wed Sep 22 1993 12:24 | 11 |
| Boy, you're really reaching here, Mac. Unfortunatly, you're coming
up empty-handed.
Since the game still continued it must not have ended. The game only
ends if the protest is upheld. Since Hobson didn't file it, and his
pitcher, along with the rest of the team, kept playing, he BLEW it.
End of story! No interpretation needed!
billl
|
88.840 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Russia-MeetNewBoss,SameAsOldBoss | Wed Sep 22 1993 13:13 | 3 |
| I think the problem with Clemens is that ugly looking goatee.
/Don
|
88.841 | Jays win 2 of 3; smile Chappy, it's almost OVER | MSE1::FRANCUS | po' po' Chappy | Fri Sep 24 1993 01:46 | 8 |
|
Well Chappy, the Red Sox couldn't come through for the Yankees; kinda
nice actually. Hopefully by the time I get back on-line on Sunday
afternoon or evening the Yankees will be mathematically eliminated;
couldn't happen to a nicer team with a nicer bunch of fans.
The Crazy Met
|
88.842 | not me. | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | The Crazy Met is a WELCHER | Fri Sep 24 1993 07:42 | 8 |
|
Hey TCW Do Kev.
Chap
|
88.843 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | po' po' Chappy | Fri Sep 24 1993 11:03 | 4 |
| Kev, can you figure out who Chappy is referring to in .842??
The Crazy Met
|
88.844 | a win equals 'limination | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's wearing maternity clothes | Mon Sep 27 1993 12:16 | 17 |
|
Yabbut from page 2.......
Among other notable events thisted weekend, the Boston Red socks were
mathematically elimited from the pennant race, despite the fact that
they won on Saturday night.
I think what happened was the Yankmees lost. I think they (the
Yankmees) were playing Toronto and that was how it worked.
Of course, I could be wrong. I have on an occasion or three been known
to be slightly innacurate. However, if I'm right, then
I remain,
::Sprots occasional accurate reporter!
Kev
|
88.845 | | ROYALT::ASHE | check da hook while da DJ revolves it | Wed Sep 29 1993 05:33 | 17 |
| Went to the double header and left by the 4th inning of the second
game. (Faux Sox fans).
1 fan reached over and grabbed a ball hit by Valentin that would have
been a triple but resulted in a ground rule double
3 or 4 baseballs were thrown into left field (Greenwell was out there)
4 or 5 people reached for foul balls and fell onto the field. Didn't
see anyone escort them out.
No beachballs were on the field, but they were starting to come out
as we left.
No one ran onto the field.
Not sure if this was covered in the Atlanta paper.
|
88.846 | :-) | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | The Crazy Met is a WELCHER | Wed Sep 29 1993 09:58 | 10 |
|
My god!
I am apalled. Fans catching balls that are still in play! I hope
Bobby Brown does something about this! This shouldn't be allowed in any
ball park!
Chappy
|
88.847 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Sep 29 1993 10:55 | 10 |
| � 3 or 4 baseballs were thrown into left field (Greenwell was out there)
I thought Zupcic was out there. The radio announcers mentioned this.
Said Sparky should send out one of his scouts to find the guy before
security did so he could have some bullpen help.
What happened lasted night anyway? In the first game I heard Mo's HR
to put the Sox up 8-3 and then it was time for rugby training. I heard
they won 11-6. I fell asleep in the second game with the Sox up 6-3 in
the 8th and heard this morning that they lost 7-6 in the 11th.
|
88.848 | | ROYALT::ASHE | check da hook while da DJ revolves it | Wed Sep 29 1993 11:00 | 6 |
| Could have been Zupcic, he went in for defense late in the game...
What happened? I don't know, the Sox scored a few runs and the Tigers
scored a few in the first game. It wasn't really close...
Second game Harris blew the game in the 8th I think.
|
88.849 | C'mon Walt!@ | CTHQ::LEARY | Corporate Telecom Technology Solutions | Wed Sep 29 1993 14:00 | 9 |
| Equating guys who "reach over" to pick up a foul ball on the third
bae line to those infantile idjits in Yankee Stadium is quite a
stretch.
Now those nitwits who threw baseballs either belong in Camden Yards
or the Big A 8^). They're idjits too.
MikeL
|
88.850 | \ | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | Number 3 Looms over Fenway | Wed Sep 29 1993 14:13 | 15 |
|
Mike_L
Those fans on the third base line last night were "falling" (as
the Red Sox announcers reported) out onto the field to get foul balls.
And seeing how that guy who caught Mattingly's homerun got so much
crap in here. Valentin hit a ball to CF and a fan reached over and
grabbed the ball it was ruled a double(good call). So for those fans
that are so quiet in here today about the game (but were noisy last
week) I guess Fenway isn't exactly your neighborhood ball field huh?
Chappy
|
88.851 | | ROYALT::ASHE | check da hook while da DJ revolves it | Wed Sep 29 1993 14:19 | 8 |
| If you go on the field, you're tossed, AL rules right? Or subject to
interpretation by the home park? They went after foul balls and either
jumped out to get them and jumped back in or fell over the wall trying
to get them...
The ball would to CF would have been off the wall. Butch didn't even
come out to argue the call...
|
88.852 | Hey, could you guys check back when you've got something? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 29 1993 14:32 | 18 |
|
> And seeing how that guy who caught Mattingly's homerun got so much
> crap in here. Valentin hit a ball to CF and a fan reached over and
> grabbed the ball it was ruled a double(good call).
I don't recall that guy getting so much crap in here, but now that you
mention it, the Yankees and the New York media did deserve a heaping
serving of the stuff for turning the guy into a hero for the incident.
When the Red Sox invite the jerk down to the clubhouse to meet John
Valentin and get his autograph because he prevented ol' Johnny from
getting thrown out on the basepaths, I'll let you know. Apparently to
the New York Yankees the words "in violation of American League rules,
subject to prosecution" translate to "in violation of AL rules, subject
to fawning adulation from Don Mattingly". Which I suppose for a
youngster who knows he's done wrong is punishment enough...
glenn
|
88.853 | | ROYALT::ASHE | check da hook while da DJ revolves it | Wed Sep 29 1993 14:40 | 8 |
| You asked me Glenn if I was exaggerating about the interruptions and
people disrupting play and all I'm saying is what happened last night.
It got more media attention in NY because both incidents (Mattingly
HR and the Stanley popup) affected the final outcome of the games.
If the first game winds up 5-4 Detroit because Valentin is left
stranded instead of being on third, there'd have been a bigger concern
made...
|
88.854 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Wed Sep 29 1993 14:43 | 6 |
|
It also got more media attention in NY because it affected games while
the Yanks were in the midst of a pennant race. What these losers did yester-
day is wrong. I don't think anyone who calls himself a Red Sox fan would
say different (unlike Yankees fans) but I think we're still talking apples
and oranges.
|
88.855 | ! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's wearing maternity clothes | Wed Sep 29 1993 14:47 | 9 |
|
Yabbut with comparing bananas to coleslaw ya also gotta admit that
nobody's mentioned that Sele's got his 7th win of the season too!
Not too shabby I'd say!
I remain,
salami, almonds and whipped cream
Kev
|
88.856 | Glen > Sophocles > Aristotle > | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | Number 3 Looms over Fenway | Wed Sep 29 1993 14:53 | 9 |
|
Oh I'm sorry Glen I keep forgetting that I need to go get a Sports
Encyclopedia before I can Argue with you, or about your beloved "team"
Chappy
|
88.857 | | LAGUNA::MAY_BR | MEts in (last in) 94 | Wed Sep 29 1993 14:59 | 3 |
|
You don't need an encyclopedia, but a dictionary/grammar checker would be
appreciated.
|
88.858 | Add entry EASY::GRAMMER | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | Number 3 Looms over Fenway | Wed Sep 29 1993 15:02 | 8 |
|
Sorry I'll go get Hooked on Phonics t o n i g h t ..
Chappy
|
88.859 | | LAGUNA::MAY_BR | MEts in (last in) 94 | Wed Sep 29 1993 15:07 | 5 |
|
That's the problem, you write as if H.O.P. is how you learned to ryte
and spel.
|
88.860 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 29 1993 15:12 | 9 |
|
This seems to be a recurring theme with you, Chappy: you come in with
your usual derisive question, get an answer that you don't like,
and then cry foul and hurl insults at the guy who has the audacity to
respond to you. Take your own advice, man: get a sense of humor,
wouldya?
glenn
|
88.861 | Reading Riting and Red Sox hating.... | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | Number 3 Looms over Fenway | Wed Sep 29 1993 15:15 | 10 |
|
Shite I did'n't no that speeling and grammmmar was the
prerequisites to riting in dis here notesfills.
I'll have to go back to Alabamama and relearn my three r's.
Chappy
|
88.862 | Sorry Glen | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | Number 3 Looms over Fenway | Wed Sep 29 1993 15:27 | 17 |
|
> Check back when you guys got something.
Glen are you sure your looking at this correctly. Everytime I get
into a debate with you, my opinion is wrong? BTW I didn't mean to
insult you in any way shape or form. I'm sorry if you saw it that way.
I think I have the best sense of humor of anybody I know. I
thought what those idiots did in NY was wrong, but I also thought it
was funny. I was just trying to put in here what I saw last night at
Fenway. Seeing we talked a half day about NY,I just thought I'd
illuminate Fenways goin-ons.
Chappy
|
88.863 | | DECWET::METZGER | Owner of the scorpion petting zoo. | Wed Sep 29 1993 15:37 | 9 |
|
At least the iodiots at Fenway are smart enough to go after a souvenier (the
baseball) What were the idiots in the Bronx after?
Maybe it was a mass halucination where they all thought they were Morganna and
were after smooches from Donny baseball not. Or they all wanted to show Wade
that they weren't wearing any underwear?
Metz
|
88.864 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | That SIR is an Unmitigated Fabrication | Wed Sep 29 1993 15:39 | 8 |
|
>Maybe it was a mass halucination where they all thought they were Morganna and
>were after smooches from Donny baseball not. Or they all wanted to show Wade
>that they weren't wearing any underwear?
You can bet Wade was lookin' too.............
|
88.865 | To rainy for no undies | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | Number 3 Looms over Fenway | Wed Sep 29 1993 15:47 | 3 |
|
:-)
|
88.866 | There should be an intelligence test requirement for those seats | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 29 1993 15:48 | 19 |
|
My apologies also, Chappy. No, I don't disagree with you about the
fan interference issue. I think what those fans did at Fenway did is
reprehensible. But worst of all, I don't like to see such behavior
celebrated, as has happened in some recent instances. Believe me, I
have always regarded even simple fan interference as a serious offense,
that in a perfect world would be punishable by castration (a fair
exchange for the all-important ball) on the first offense with
escalating punishments meted out to repeat offenders. The problem is
that these days they take 10 minutes to read all those damn
announcements spelling out all the bad things that will happen to you
if you interfere with play, but management is afraid to toss out some
geek who's managed to get his hands on the corporations' front-row
tickets, so they do nothing. What used to be a cardinal offense is
now regarded by the average fan as a privilege of attending the game.
Yet another example of declining US standards...
glenn
|
88.867 | one of his highly recommended | CNTROL::CHILDS | That SIR is an Unmitigated Fabrication | Wed Sep 29 1993 16:17 | 8 |
| <<< Note 88.866 by NAC::G_WAUGAMAN >>>
-< There should be an intelligence test requirement for those seats >-
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
I thought you liked the Bleachers Glenn? I'm sittin here listen to Sam Cooke
and missin' T.....
mike
|
88.868 | | ROYALT::ASHE | check da hook while da DJ revolves it | Wed Sep 29 1993 16:20 | 3 |
| Which Sam Cooke? Greatest hits? That's a good CD.... the man was
Smooooth....
|
88.869 | "My Friend Goo just goes P-U" | CNTROL::CHILDS | That SIR is an Unmitigated Fabrication | Wed Sep 29 1993 16:29 | 10 |
|
> Which Sam Cooke? Greatest hits? That's a good CD.... the man was
> Smooooth....
I'd say so. The actual title is "A Man and His Music" but it's obviously
a compilation of hits. An excellent one at that. Smoooth is a good choice
of words.......
mike
|
88.870 | | ROYALT::ASHE | check da hook while da DJ revolves it | Wed Sep 29 1993 16:33 | 3 |
| Yeah, that's the one I have... nice disk... there's over 20 tracks on
it, right?
|
88.871 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 29 1993 16:36 | 8 |
|
> I thought you liked the Bleachers Glenn?
Well, you know, there's a poverty test in place too (which I pass, or
fail, one or the other...)
glenn
|
88.872 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Sep 29 1993 16:45 | 7 |
| There is a difference between falling out of a seat going after a dead
ball and running onto the field while a ball is being put into play.
There is also a difference on how the media appeared to handle the
events in each town. In Boston, there was little to no mention of the
incidents on the game wrap-ups and there was outright derision by the
radio guys during the incidents. In NY the guy who ran onto the field
was creditted with the Yankee W and was a local hero.
|
88.873 | | 16134::CHAPALONIS_M | Number 3 Looms over Fenway | Wed Sep 29 1993 16:55 | 8 |
|
Yabbut Mac, Why was there little to no mention of it in Boston. Is
it because of Bostons holier than thou attitude? Or because they are
trying to keep people "falling" out of the stands to a minimum?
Chappy
|
88.874 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Sep 29 1993 17:05 | 4 |
| The Boston media refuses to show people leaving in the stands believing
that these folks are after publicity and they won't give it to them.
Also, they recognize the difference between overreaching for a foul
ball and running onto the playing field.
|
88.875 | | LAGUNA::MAY_BR | MEts in (last in) 94 | Wed Sep 29 1993 17:13 | 5 |
| > Or because they are trying to keep people "falling" out of the
> stands to a minimum?
I believe that is what Boston is trying to do. Is there something
wrong with that? What is NY doing?
|
88.876 | sometimes I think I'd rather be poor, than not quite rich enough | CNTROL::CHILDS | That SIR is an Unmitigated Fabrication | Thu Sep 30 1993 10:16 | 4 |
|
Oh well Glenn atleast you're not the only one suffering.....
mike
|
88.877 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | SOMFAOLMUFA | Thu Sep 30 1993 14:20 | 9 |
| RE: Valentin's caught ball.
The correct call was made, ground rule double. Course the umpires
didn't have to worry about some raving lunatic, foaming at the mouth,
coming out of the stands with a snub nose looking to blow away the
umpire who would dare to take a homerun away from precious Donny
Baseball.
/Don
|
88.878 | | CAM3::WAY | From the center, off the roll, quick march | Mon Oct 04 1993 10:04 | 14 |
| Well, the boys finished so appropriately yesterday, in true Red Sox fashion.
I managed to hear part of the game on my way back from a job, and there
was one out in the 9th when I turned off the radio, to stop off at
a friend's house.
A couple of hours later, I'm back in the truck, and they're in the 14th,
down by three. It figures....
I went home and watched my "Field of Dreams" tape. At least that way
the end of the baseball season didn't leave a bad taste in my mouth....
'Saw
|
88.879 | Lou must go! Lou must go! Lou must go! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Oct 04 1993 11:01 | 1 |
|
|
88.880 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | SOMFAOLMUFA | Mon Oct 04 1993 15:52 | 3 |
| Hey Waugamain, why you picking on Louis Ortiz for?
/Don
|
88.881 | I was referring to Rivera, Slash... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Oct 04 1993 16:01 | 1 |
|
|
88.882 | Never mind... | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | SOMFAOLMUFA | Mon Oct 04 1993 16:36 | 1 |
|
|
88.883 | | 16421::HEISER | AWANA | Mon Oct 04 1993 18:02 | 1 |
| What's Geraldo have to do with the BoSox?
|
88.884 | Chappy, Glenn, you guys rule | AKOCOA::MAILROOM | | Tue Oct 05 1993 13:25 | 13 |
| I was just reading a few back. Glenn and Chappy, you guys are classic.
You had me rolling.
But remember what you said in RED_SOX. You'll be laughing at us Sox
fans as the Yanks go to the World Series. I'm laughing because your
Yanks chooooooooked! Just like us Sox did!
Hey old Chappy one, have you finished reading Curious George yet?
Wade might have left Boston, but he's still on a team that chokes!
A BLAST FROM THE PAST
|
88.885 | My credo: stop Lou before he kills again! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Oct 05 1993 18:14 | 29 |
|
>> I expect a significant and noticeable dropoff in the rightfield
>> grandstand and bleacher seats. It takes a while...
>
> Last year you said we'd see a decline this year but all it took
> was for the Sox to make a well timed (ticket saleswise) run and
> folks were hooked all over again.
I believe there was a small decline on the whole. There were weekend
games that actually weren't virtual sell-outs, for the first time since
before 1986 to the best of my recollection. I don't dispute that New
England is unalterably hooked on the Red Sox, but with this ticket price
increase (the first in 4 years; another factor), I can see this gradual
decline in attendance from 2.6 million to 2.4 million over the past two
years continuing downward to maybe as far as 2.0-2.2 million as the Red
Sox continue to lose. Not a disaster, perhaps, but nonetheless belying
the Sox' contention that the ballpark's size makes the increases
necessary (I don't doubt they'll make more money with the price
increase, though).
There has been some real stupidity in the financial decisions made over
the past three years and I think some serious belt-tightening has
already begun. In a roundabout way this might actually be good, because
I'd rather see the Sox involuntarily do nothing than voluntarily do
something stupid. If that philosophy had been in place since 1990 the
Sox would be in much better shape than they presently are...
glenn
|
88.886 | | DECWET::METZGER | Owner of the scorpion petting zoo. | Tue Oct 05 1993 18:35 | 13 |
|
The financial strength of the Sox still lies in their debt free status and
their local cable ownership/contract....
After the Sox get sold to an ownership group now laden with $150 million debt
you might see the payroll affected by the bottom line. Until that time they'll
continue to throw good money after bad in search of a clue...
M's drew over 2 million this year (legit) for the first time but the lack of a
cable deal has killed their revenues as well as that of most smaller market
clubs...
Metz
|
88.887 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Oct 06 1993 10:00 | 2 |
| Metz, the Red Sox have pulled in around 2-� million fans into Fenway
each of the last 3 years.
|
88.888 | It may be on the margins, but it's there... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Oct 06 1993 10:54 | 22 |
|
The actual Fenway attendance numbers are:
Total # Dates Avg
1993 2.42 M 80 30,275
1992 2.47 M 78 31,648
1991 2.56 M 80 32,030
So the Red Sox have experienced a small 5.5% decline in per-game
attendance over the past two years, almost 2,000 fans per game. This
season the Sox had the good fortune of having a very strong start and a
late rebound which kept the park relatively full through August before
they fell apart in September, but even then season attendance declined
from a woeful 1992. The Red Sox' stated conclusion? The ballpark is
getting smaller. But seriously, the combination of a healthy ticket
price increase, limited free agent talent available in this off-season,
and the prospects of an almost certain third straight losing season will,
in my opinion, drive attendance further downward, and below 30,000 per
game for the first season since 1987.
glenn
|
88.889 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Oct 06 1993 12:18 | 6 |
| �After the Sox get sold to an ownership group now laden with $150 million debt
�you might see the payroll affected by the bottom line. Until that time they'll
�continue to throw good money after bad in search of a clue...
Current ownership is planning for a sale and as such are not signing
anyone other than Clemens to contracts past 1994.
|
88.890 | Why can't the Sox get Players/Coaches like this :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Number 3 Looms over Fenway | Thu Oct 14 1993 12:10 | 6 |
|
Dwight Evans was named as the new Rockies Hitting coach and
Outfielder Coach.
Chappy
|
88.891 | Fregosi was another Sox couldabeen | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Oct 14 1993 12:23 | 18 |
| You know watching Jim Fregosi reminded me of another chapter in the Sox
book. Fregosi was the star of the Louisville triple A team prior to
1961 and was allowed to go in the epansion draft. Why, because he
would've taken Don Buddin's job who was Pinky Higgins son-in-law (or
some piece of nepostistic cabal). And of course, TY loved his adopted
baseball family.
Finally, by 67 the sox figured out that if they were going to exclude
blacks and hispanics they'd better at least add an italian or too after
the unhoped for, unforseen success of Malzone. Hence, Petrocelli 15
years after Pesky.
Yes, Glenn I have been reading G's(*) (I'm not going to try that one)
"Fenway". What a frustrating reminder; I feel like a pole reading
Polish history - who was that shortstop they let go in 1776 who led
Washington's Americans to the 1783 Flag - Was***ki?
(*)ok, Goldenbrock? Author of "Number 1" with Billy Martin
|
88.892 | Po' Monbo and Yaz | CTHQ::LEARY | Corporate Telecom Technology Solutions | Thu Oct 14 1993 12:27 | 10 |
| Yea,
The Sox knew that they could let Fregosi go, after all, the immortal
Eddie Bressoud was on the horizon to take over for the multifacted
Don Buddin. And let's not forget the inimmitable Felix Mantilla
and the scintillating Roman Mejias to go along with the wowow Ike
Delock, Jack Lamabe, Arnold Early, and Mike Fornieles.
Ah, how I pine for my youth
MikeL
|
88.893 | Fregosi best expansion draftee *ever* | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Oct 14 1993 12:37 | 19 |
|
> Yes, Glenn I have been reading G's(*) (I'm not going to try that one)
> "Fenway". What a frustrating reminder; I feel like a pole reading
> Polish history - who was that shortstop they let go in 1776 who led
> Washington's Americans to the 1783 Flag - Was***ki?
Casimir Pulaski. Sox let him go for a General-to-be-named-later,
blond-headed white guy by the name of Custer...
Stop it, Breen, you're killing me! The Fregosi/Buddin fiasco was only
nearly an exact repeat of the Pee Wee Reese/Joe Cronin blunder! The
Sox made "We Are Fam-i-ly" their motto long before the 1979 Pirates
stole the theme...
I read the Golenbock oral history of the Red Sox, consider it to be The
Bible, and believe every word of it as 100% indisputable fact!
glenn
|
88.894 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu Oct 14 1993 13:29 | 6 |
| > Ah, how I pine for my youth
yeah MikeL since then it was only 40 or 50 years since the Red Sox last
won the WS - hah hah.
The Crazy Met
|
88.895 | | USCTR1::KING | Look, I can hear what you are thinking..... | Mon Oct 18 1993 14:58 | 5 |
| Did any one else see Americ's funnest people show lasted nigh?
Seems the show had 3 red sox players doing a skit on how to make Boston
Pizza.... It was a classic!!! Viola, Greenwell and Lyons....
REK
|
88.896 | | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | P.C.Beavis&ButtHead-ChangeIt!!! | Mon Oct 18 1993 16:00 | 3 |
| I heard when they tried eating it afterwards they all choked.
/Don
|
88.897 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Oct 26 1993 09:43 | 2 |
| The Red Sox have chosen to not renew the contracts of coaches Rick
Burleson, Rich Gale, and Al Bumbry.
|
88.898 | | 16421::HEISER | visualize whirled peas | Tue Oct 26 1993 10:45 | 1 |
| Butch finished 10th in the COY voting.
|
88.899 | Yeah, he got all of 1 vote | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Carol's wearing maternity clothes | Tue Oct 26 1993 10:46 | 1 |
|
|
88.900 | SNARF | 16421::HEISER | visualize whirled peas | Tue Oct 26 1993 10:47 | 1 |
| WE'RE #10! WE'RE #10! WE'RE #10! WE'RE #10!
|
88.901 | Anybody else have doubts on NL parity with AL? | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Nov 04 1993 17:37 | 21 |
| I assume there is some talk about this Marquis Grissom - Aaron Sele
swap. If I was convinced that all things were equal I might go for
that but I have one problem
I am not sure National League performances can be guaged by AL
standards - I believe A.L. has move a class above not that NL is AAA
but maybe AAA+.
The major doubt I have is the ability of a Grissom to hit AL
pitching. Some of my doubts come from simply watching, some from world
series ( I thought a real good NL hitting club should have hit better
against mediocre by al standards pitching but Jays had better pitching
than top nl club).
Unfortunatly I can't prove this and world series occurs once a year
and yes perhaps bjays are just unique in all of baseball. But I am
very wary of making trade decisions as though NL was an equal major
league partner with AL eg If both Grissom were still in AAA would you
make the deal?
The Plantier stats make me suspect nl stats too
|
88.902 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | Mets in '94 | Thu Nov 04 1993 19:24 | 7 |
| basing anything on the Phillies pitching is pretty bogus. Braves had
the best pitching in the NL. Granted the Phillies beat the Braves but
in a 7 game series ... Sure most of the time the better team does win,
but not always.
The Crazy Met
|
88.903 | Hal-le-lu-jah! Hal-le-lu-jah! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Nov 10 1993 08:58 | 1 |
|
|
88.904 | The thrid Lou | ROCK::MURPHY | The two Lous | Wed Nov 10 1993 09:04 | 5 |
| Wait a sec, first. He is still the "acting" GM. Of course, that's
all he's been doing, acting like a GM.
Murph
|
88.905 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Nov 24 1993 10:10 | 2 |
| Another Sullivan has moved out of the New England sportscene. Haywoood
sold his 1/3 interest in the Red Sox back to the JRY Foundation.
|
88.906 | they're cut from the same cloth | 16421::HEISER | but I *like* it!!! | Wed Nov 24 1993 12:00 | 1 |
| This reminds me of why I can't stand Bidwill.
|
88.907 | Good riddance, Hayseed | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is one year old!!! | Wed Nov 24 1993 13:22 | 2 |
| I've hated Haywood Sullivan since his stoopid botched contract mailing caused
my all-time favorite Red Sock, Carlton Fisk to leave town.
|
88.908 | But is he an athlete? | CAM3::WAY | You can't polish a turd | Wed Dec 08 1993 12:19 | 9 |
| Well, we've all been so busy beating the shit out of each other over in
that Patsy note, we've neglected the really big important news.
Yesterday, the Red Sox signed Otis Nixon to a two year contract.
Pretty interesting, eh?
'Saw
|
88.909 | The Red Sox' temporary Irving Fryar... ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Dec 08 1993 13:27 | 12 |
|
> Well, we've all been so busy beating the shit out of each other over in
> that Patsy note, we've neglected the really big important news.
I assume you're being facetious with that last bit... the move makes
some sense but it's no earth-shaker. Look for Nixon to fill the CF
hole only adequately and only for a short time as he's starting to
slip (never was that good to begin with), with adequate still being
preferable to inadequate, though...
glenn
|
88.910 | | CAM3::WAY | You can't polish a turd | Wed Dec 08 1993 13:30 | 25 |
| > I assume you're being facetious with that last bit... the move makes
> some sense but it's no earth-shaker. Look for Nixon to fill the CF
> hole only adequately and only for a short time as he's starting to
> slip (never was that good to begin with), with adequate still being
> preferable to inadequate, though...
Yeah, I was. The way I see it, he's just another player picked up
by the Red Sox who has had success in the past, but won't produce upon
crossing the Boston city limits.
That other guy, Jack Clark, comes to mind for some reason.
And last night, Mike and the Mad Dog brought up a good point -- Nixon steals
a lot, but he won't go in the big situation (ie 2-2 in the eight when
he reaches with no out).
Now, I can't say that I've ever SEEN that happen, and of course I could
only be GUESSING, but I'll go with what Mike and Christopher said and
see if the same thing happens here.....
'SAw
|
88.911 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Number 3 Looms over Fenway | Wed Dec 08 1993 13:45 | 23 |
|
Nixon
Greenwell Dawson
Fletcher
Whats the Average age 38?
Parade in October...
At the Geritol Stand!!!!!!
Chappy
|
88.912 | Otis will be missed. | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Wed Dec 08 1993 13:52 | 19 |
| Otis' stay in Atlanta was certainly a positive one for Nixon and Braves
Fan alike. He was a very popular player, which is saying a lot
considering he got nailed for drug use a couple years ago and missed
the playoffs & WS.
This year he effectively got the shaft from Braves management, cause as
soon as they inked Deion Sanders to a contract Otis took up permanent
residence on the bench. To his credit he didn't complain, and he and
Deion remained close friends. When Sanders went down with a nasty
virus Nixon took over again and played so well Cox couldn't take him
out of the lineup.
Otis' Braves career will always be remembered for his surreal game
saving catch two (2) years ago off the bat of Andy Van Slyke in the
9th inning against the Pirates. Quite simply the most incredible catch
I've ever seen.
- ACC Chris
|
88.913 | | CAM3::WAY | You can't polish a turd | Wed Dec 08 1993 13:57 | 4 |
| > 9th inning against the Pirates. Quite simply the most incredible catch
> I've ever seen.
That was a catch to behold, without a doubt.....
|
88.914 | OK. so where's Roger going? | CTHQ::LEARY | Corporate Telecom Technology Solutions | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:00 | 13 |
| I don't care if Otis has lost some, but he fills a serious, albeit
temporarily, void at leadoff and CF. Now maybe Billy Hatcher can play
right or left ( here's hoping bye-bye to Greenwell). Hope they
can get Borders without giving the store away. And I'd still like
to see Rickey Henderson here in left ( cain he hit 2nd??).
MikeL
P.S.
Nasty rumor has it that the Sox only signed Nixon to save on uni
changes so Trot cain fill right in at Cfer in a coupla years.
|
88.915 | | 7806::ASHE | I ring my 'lil bell on the sidewalk... | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:25 | 5 |
| Wait...
If you trade Greenwell, put Hatcher in LF, Nixon in CF and
Dawson/Quintana in RF, that would leave the Sox without a... gasp...
|
88.916 | Not that Greenwell is so great... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:29 | 8 |
|
> If you trade Greenwell, put Hatcher in LF, Nixon in CF and
> Dawson/Quintana in RF, that would leave the Sox without a... gasp...
...an outfielder that can hit? ;-)
glenn
|
88.917 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is one year old!!! | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:32 | 3 |
| As long as the Sox don't do the truly stoopid thing they have been talking
about - trading Frankie Rodriguez or Ken Ryan, or even Paul Quantrill for a
medicore catcher.
|
88.918 | | CTHQ::LEARY | Corporate Telecom Technology Solutions | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:34 | 6 |
| I'd trade Quantrill for Borders, not including Frankie and Ryan.
However Toronto woyuld scoff. After all, we gots a well-rested
Jose Melendez to pick up the slack.
MikeL
|
88.919 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:37 | 2 |
| Doesn't the Nixon signing go against the clubhouse chemistry stuff Lou
and Butch want?
|
88.920 | -1, don't worry, Otis will be tested 8^) | CTHQ::LEARY | Corporate Telecom Technology Solutions | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:40 | 1 |
|
|
88.921 | A stopgap solution at best - for $7 million! | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Gentleness overcomes strength | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:42 | 10 |
| Ah yes - Otis is just what the Sox need - a 35 year old ex druggie
singles hitter who relies on speed and has never played a full season
in the majors. I predict he'll be flirting with the Mendoza Line
about June 1st when one of those cold late spring days hits Fenway
and Otis pops a hamstring, effectively removing him from the lineup
until August, when the Sox are 25 games out of first place.
But he'll have an excellent September!
NAZZ
|
88.922 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:48 | 3 |
| Chappy, Dawson ain't the RF, he's a DH. There's some speculation that
Cooper might be moved to RF to make room at 3B for either Naehring
(gambling that he'll stay healthy), or free agent Chris Sabo.
|
88.923 | Rickey wouldn't hold up under Boston press | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:50 | 4 |
| �Now maybe Billy Hatcher can play
� right or left ( here's hoping bye-bye to Greenwell).
Oh, yeah, Billy Hatcher is a huge offensive improvement over Greenwell.
|
88.924 | I think this is what Walt was driving at... | DECWET::METZGER | America's most beloved game show host | Wed Dec 08 1993 16:47 | 9 |
|
Ya gotta have cooper in RF because without him there you'd have a non-white
outfield and everybody knows the Sox need some sort of great white hope in the
outfield to keep the crowds coming in.....
Maybe they can keep Rob Deer for just this position....
Metz
|
88.925 | Scott Cooper in the OF: white (very) yes; hope, no | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Dec 08 1993 16:57 | 15 |
|
> Ya gotta have cooper in RF because without him there you'd have a non-white
> outfield and everybody knows the Sox need some sort of great white hope in the
> outfield to keep the crowds coming in.....
Is it the outfield as opposed to anywhere else because we bleacherites
can reach the OFs with our projectiles? It'd be a shame to lose Greenwell
out there because without a doubt he's taken the most verbal abuse of
anyone on either team over the last five years. You need that cathartic
outlet. Plus, will Otis Nixon pick up on the very popular Billy Hatcher's
routine of throwing baseballs up in the 9th inning (snagged two last
year)? These are the things that really matter...
glenn
|
88.926 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Dec 08 1993 16:57 | 1 |
| Metz, the Sox let Deer go.
|
88.927 | | 7806::ASHE | I ring my 'lil bell on the sidewalk... | Wed Dec 08 1993 17:43 | 3 |
| Yup, they let him go... so maybe Cooper moves out there...
Hatcher's a better defensive player than Greenwell, Mac...
|
88.928 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Dec 09 1993 11:12 | 4 |
| � Hatcher's a better defensive player than Greenwell, Mac...
Agreed, but I did say offensive and you really don't need/want a
defensive specialist in LF.
|
88.929 | You are all nattering nabobs of negativism | VAXMKT::ROBICHAUD | Homer,Plato,Voltaire,DanReeves | Thu Dec 09 1993 12:18 | 5 |
| I think getting Nixon is not a bad move. I know the guy is 81
years old, but he did open relations with China and he ain't afraid to
drop them bombs when necessary.
/Don
|
88.930 | | GWEN::ASHE | I ring my 'lil bell on the sidewalk... | Thu Dec 09 1993 13:26 | 7 |
| If offense is a wash and one guys better defensively, wouldn't he get
the edge normally?
Greenwell .315 13 HR, 5 SB, 136 RP, 146 games
Hatcher .287, 9 HR 14 SB, 119 RP, 136 games
Is Greenwell THAT much better to make up for his defense?
|
88.931 | | RICKS::HUBER | File and Forget | Thu Dec 09 1993 13:55 | 15 |
|
Greenwell and Hatcher are nowhere near a wash offensively, though...
Greenwell - .480 SLG, .379 OBP, 5 SB/4 CS
Hatcher - .400 SLG, .336 OBP, 14 SB/7 CS
An advantage of 80 pts SLG coupled with 40 pts OBP, in a typical
Greenwell year/career Hatcher year, and with Greenwell being 3 years
younger, it a blowout.
Not to mention, of course, the fact the Greenwell was slightly above
average defensively last year, while Hatcher was awful (albeit in CF).
(Greenwell is normally a significantly below average fielder, though.)
Joe
|
88.932 | Give Greenwell credit for his one ability: hitting the baseball | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Dec 09 1993 14:31 | 14 |
|
> An advantage of 80 pts SLG coupled with 40 pts OBP, in a typical
> Greenwell year/career Hatcher year, and with Greenwell being 3 years
> younger, it a blowout.
Yup, and I think Hatcher overachieved over most of last year just to
reach those figures. Billy Hatcher is a nice backup outfielder. I'd
still trade Greenwell if I could get one or two promising hitting
prospects, but there's no question that Greenwell is one of the very
few decent hitters on the team (Vaughn and Valentin are the only others
that were really even above average for their positions...)
glenn
|
88.933 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Dec 09 1993 15:48 | 6 |
| � If offense is a wash and one guys better defensively, wouldn't he get
� the edge normally?
Hatcher was playing above his head last year and Greenwell is coming
off an injury. Greenwell can only get better, Hatcher can only get
worse.
|
88.934 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | 26/8=3.25 --- 8 tough loses | Thu Dec 09 1993 16:44 | 12 |
|
Who cares that Otis Nixon is soon to be 35 years old? People moan
that it's only a stop gap measure and another old player. What are they
suppose to do? Sign someone who is 25 years old? They signed Otis Nixon
for 2 years, plus club option. This gives Trot Nixon 2 years of minor league
ball. If he is ready, then they buy out Otis's 3rd year. If Trot isn't
ready, then they keep Otis for the third year.
At least he can play defence and steal bases. Which is a different
approach for once. They didn't sign the key who might hit 40 homers in
fenway.
Ron
|
88.935 | ex | CAPNET::LEFEBVRE | Nature bats last | Thu Dec 09 1993 17:19 | 5 |
| And it didn't cost anything in terms of trade value. Think of it in
terms of a Otis Nixon for Rob Deere swap....and insurance until Trot
Nixon is ready for the bigs.
Mark.
|
88.936 | Why all the bashing of a guy that gives 110% everytime | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Fri Dec 10 1993 08:42 | 33 |
|
It took quite some reading to finally get past the Greenwell bashing,
I know he is not the greatest outfielder in baseball, but you don't
have to be in Fenway. It is a short field and with a little common
sense (I think Greenie is lacking here) it doesn't take a genius to
figure out a carrom of the wall, I mean there are no more rivets to
deal with. You don't need a very strong arm just accurate. Greenwell
has done a decent job at holding wall balls to singles gets enough out-
field assists to keep people honest and thats good enough. He won't
win a gold glove but who cares. The reason I like Greenwell is that
you can pretty much count on his offense he will hit .300 12-14 dingers
and about 75 rbi's. People who bash Greenie for not hitting for power
look at his stroke, he is a gap hitter not a power hitter. I would
much rather have Greenwell out in left than anyone else on the roster
or free angents for that matter. To put Hatcher out in left would be
a huge mistake. He will not reproduce last years offense and his
defense is not as good as Greenwell's. As far as the team goes they
are much improved in the outfield with the addition of Nixon and all
they need is a power hitting right fielder. Deere would do but if a
trade would come along I'd take it. Cooper in right is a joke. Did
you all forget the outstanding leaping ability of the Q last year in
Cleveland. If Coop goes out there expect more of the same. This team
needs to sign a front line catcher period. I know the vetern pitching
staff blah blah but it is one thing to have a lineup like Toronto and
carry a lighthitting catcher but when you struggle to score runs the
cathcer must carry his own weight which none of them can. Harper would
fit this fine. His defense is not good, but how many games did Pena
win with his glove anyway. Without a catcher and another 4th or 5th
starter it will be tough to stay out of the cellar.
Jerry
|
88.937 | The Braves did well to get something for him. | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Fri Dec 10 1993 09:43 | 5 |
| The Sox' signing of Otis didn't cost them "nothing". They had to give
up a draft pick, which is something GM's covet.
- ACC Chris
|
88.938 | Nixon for nothing | MPGS::MCCARTHY | Mike McCarthy SHR3-2/W1 237-2468 | Fri Dec 10 1993 10:03 | 4 |
| According to the Globe, the Red Sox did not lose a pick due to
their record the past season. I think this is a recent change.
Mike
|
88.939 | The fans will pay again | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Gentleness overcomes strength | Fri Dec 10 1993 10:45 | 5 |
| All they gave up was a mere $7 million, which means all you'll give up
is an extra 50 cents every time you purchase a hot dog or a beer at
Fenway nexted season.
NAZZ
|
88.940 | Better Check that draft thing | AKOCOA::BREEN | Bill Monboquette | Fri Dec 10 1993 12:10 | 8 |
| I believe they did have to lose a 2nd round pick. this was because
braves went ahead and offered arbitration to otis (probably after
deciding that sox or someone would sign him anyway.
But there were various glob angles on this but 2nd round seemed to be
the last word
Bill
|
88.941 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Wed Dec 29 1993 12:27 | 20 |
| Tom Hill asked me to post this.
------------------------
By the way, would you mind putting a note in SPORTS, BASEBALL and/or
RED_SOX about the availability of a "weekend package" for Red Sox season
tickets? Anyone interested can contact me at (508) 653-2452 x444 or send
email to [email protected]
The seats are in Section 12 (1B side, not too far back - even w/ infield
dirt) row 8, seats 10 &11. The cost per ticket is $12, and it works out to
2 tickets for every home Saturday & Sunday. In the past we would see each
team once, but I don't know how the schedule will work with the 3-division
format. Total number of 30 games, including Opening Day and Patriots Day
Ideally, if a group of people wanted between 5-10 games each, it would be
easier to pool the money and select certain games. We would divvy up the
tickets when they come in, usually early March.
--------------------------
The Crazy Met
|
88.942 | Parade in January | 38346::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jan 27 1994 11:56 | 6 |
| Once again the Boston Sports Fan Community can be heard shouting with
joy. First the new & improved New England Patriots are sold to a local
who is committed to keeping the team in New England. Now, the Red Sox
aquire Dan Duquette of the Montreal Expos to be their new GM. Duquette
is a local boy and is judged by many to be one of the best GMs in
baseball.
|
88.943 | | FRETZ::HEISER | shadowlands | Thu Jan 27 1994 13:02 | 6 |
| Is Lou still around? The Pony Express doesn't start baseball coverage
until Spring Training.
I'm taking my boys to see these guys this summer for the experience of
real baseball in a real environment. Hopefully they'll have a good
team to make it an even better learning experience.
|
88.944 | kicked upstairs | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu Jan 27 1994 13:27 | 3 |
| Gorman was "promoted"
The Crazy Met
|
88.945 | | 38346::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jan 27 1994 13:30 | 3 |
| Gorman was promoted to VP of Baseball Operations (or some similar VP
title) not too long after the baseball season ended. He has been the
acting GM while the Sox looked for a new one.
|
88.946 | | FRETZ::HEISER | shadowlands | Thu Jan 27 1994 13:37 | 2 |
| sounds like Cotton's title: VP of Special Operations ;-) As long as
they leave him outta the loop.
|
88.947 | Hal-le-lu-jah! Hal-le-lu-jah! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jan 27 1994 14:02 | 1 |
|
|
88.948 | Of Sugarbowl ('41)(BC) fame (re. C.O'Rourke?) | AKOCOA::BREEN | A hot-rod Ford and a two dollar bill | Thu Jan 27 1994 14:10 | 4 |
| Mike Holovak just got "fired"/kicked upstairs (AP called it fired) by
Houston. He's scouting director.
|
88.949 | | CAM3::WAY | Horseshoes and hand-grenades, man | Thu Jan 27 1994 14:20 | 1 |
| Gorman was "fired" in a true DEC sense -- ie promoted up out of the way.....
|
88.950 | Dat's a joke son.. RahRah BC '41 8^) | CTHQ::LEARY | Corporate Telecom Technology Solutions | Thu Jan 27 1994 15:25 | 4 |
| Is Holovak still taking solid foods??
MikeL
|
88.951 | Leary, I hope you genuflected | AKOCOA::BREEN | A hot-rod Ford and a two dollar bill | Thu Jan 27 1994 15:36 | 1 |
|
|
88.952 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu Jan 27 1994 15:38 | 3 |
| Lets hear it for the Vatican Rag! heck of a song!
The Crazy Met
|
88.953 | genuflected and said "dominus vobiscum" | CTHQ::LEARY | Corporate Telecom Technology Solutions | Thu Jan 27 1994 15:44 | 1 |
|
|
88.954 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu Jan 27 1994 15:49 | 4 |
| Ava Maria, gee its good to see ya
Doing the Vatican, doing the Vatican, doing the Vatican Rag.
The Crazy Met
|
88.955 | w/o permission, of course.... | CAM3::WAY | Horseshoes and hand-grenades, man | Thu Jan 27 1994 15:58 | 36 |
| "Vatican Rag"
by Tom Lehrer
First you get down on your knees,
fiddle with your rosaries,
Bow your head with great respect and
Genuflect, Genuflect, Genuflect.
You can do any steps you want to
If you've cleared them with the Pontiff
Everybody say his own Kyrie Eleison
Doin' the Vatican Rag.
(bridge)
Get in line in that processional
step into that dark confessional
Where the guy who's got religion'll
tell you if your sin's original
If it is try playin' it safer,
Drink the wine and chew the wafer
Two-four-six-eight,
Time to transubstantiate!
First you get down on your knees,
fiddle with your rosaries,
Bow your head with great respect and
Genuflect, Genuflect, Genuflect.
Make a cross on your abdomen
When in Rome do like a Roman
Ave Maria, gee it's good to see ya,
Gettin' ecstatic, it's kinda dramatic
just doin' the Vatican Rag!
|
88.956 | Caught myself | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Mark Matthew Jr. 6lbs 6 ounces. | Thu Jan 27 1994 16:00 | 8 |
|
Quick an alltime..... uh never mind1!!!!
Chappy
|
88.957 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu Jan 27 1994 16:01 | 8 |
| ok Tommy and Mac all together now ...
What does this have to do with the Red Sox :-)
Thanks Saw.
The Crazy Met
|
88.958 | Now if was the Cardinals | AKOCOA::BREEN | A hot-rod Ford and a two dollar bill | Thu Jan 27 1994 16:23 | 1 |
|
|
88.959 | more Los Wages(tm) lines | FRETZ::HEISER | Hey! Ho! Hey! Ho! Hey! Ho! Hey! Ho! | Mon Feb 07 1994 17:00 | 1 |
| BoSox are at 35:1 odds (so are the Reds) to win the Series in '94.
|
88.960 | | CAPNET::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Product Management | Mon Feb 21 1994 15:47 | 5 |
| It was just reported in the Red_Sox conference that Ted Williams has
suffered a stroke and is in serious, but stable condition. Anyone hear
any further news?
Mark.
|
88.961 | | HANNAH::ASHE | NY, London, Paris, Munich... | Mon Feb 21 1994 16:18 | 1 |
| Nope, that's all I heard...
|
88.962 | what goes round comes around | METSNY::francus | /er's heroes:VictorKiam and PatSullivan | Mon Feb 21 1994 16:21 | 3 |
| yo Lufay, why ask here? you'll get quicker info in the RedSox notesfile.
The Crazy Met
|
88.963 | | HANNAH::ASHE | NY, London, Paris, Munich... | Mon Feb 21 1994 17:16 | 37 |
| Article 24616 of clari.sports.baseball:
Xref: nntpd2.cxo.dec.com clari.sports.baseball:24616 clari.news.interest.people:12761 clari.local.massachusetts:3494
Path: nntpd2.cxo.dec.com!pa.dec.com!decwrl!looking!bass!clarinews
Approved: [email protected]
From: [email protected] (AP)
Newsgroups: clari.sports.baseball,clari.news.interest.people,clari.local.massachusetts
Subject: Report: Ted Williams Has Stroke
Keywords: General baseball news
Copyright: 1994 by The Associated Press, R
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 12:40:29 PST
Expires: Mon, 14 Mar 94 12:40:29 PST
ACategory: sports
Slugword: Ted-Williams
Priority: regular
ANPA: Wc: 155/0; Id: V0844; Src: ap; Sel: -----; Adate: 02-21-N/A
Codes: APO-2010
Lines: 15
BOSTON (AP) -- A broadcast report out of Boston says that Hall of
Famer Ted Williams has suffered a stroke. According to WBZ, the
75-year-old former Red Sox outfielder is resting comfortably at a
Florida hospital.
According to sources, Williams is in stable condition. It's the
second stroke for the baseball great in the last 27 months.
Williams is known as baseball's best post-World War II hitter,
combining batting average with power as few others did. He won two
triple crowns, leading the American League in batting average, home
runs and RBIs in 1942 and 1947. Williams had a keen eye, walking
more than anyone in history except Babe Ruth and leading the
American League eight times.
In recent years, Williams has been involved in baseball
memorabilia, the opening of his own store outside Boston and his
own museum in Florida.
|
88.964 | Had to get Dugan stuff out of sec note 0 first landing area | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Feb 23 1994 12:02 | 15 |
| Tcm,
re. that Dugan quote I used in the sec note...
Where did you see that? That wasn't from any book, Joe told that
anecdote to a group of us once, he had a million.
Connie Mack in his baseball instructional had Dugan as his #3 all
time 3rd baseman behind Traynor and Jimmy Collins (not necessarily in
that order, Mack probably had jc first).
Of course brooks, schmidt not to speak of the boyers, santo came later.
(but not to speak of wade boggs).
yeh, connie and me when we were kids we sure liked to play that
baseball
|
88.965 | Have never heard the quote, though... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Feb 23 1994 12:08 | 11 |
|
Yeah, Bill, I was a bit confused by the reference to Wilbert Robinson
with the Braves so I looked it up, and Robinson never managed anyone
but the Dodgers. I thought maybe he put in 1-2 years at the end, and
since you were there, figured you would know. ;-) Maybe the subject
of Dugan's comment was owner Judge Fuchs as you mentioned. That would
explain the ignorance of a legal man thinking "stealing" was against
the rules...
glenn
|
88.966 | Opening Day records? | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Mon Mar 28 1994 17:52 | 13 |
|
Yabbut I thought I heard Roger say that he was gonna pitch
on Opening Day.
If he does, how many OD's would this make and what's his record?
I remain,
not particularly interested - just to add more 'trons
Kev
;^)
|
88.967 | | HANNAH::ASHE | like sands thru the hourglass, so were the days of his lives | Mon Mar 28 1994 18:01 | 2 |
| Who cares... Tigers should win anyway...
|
88.968 | I don't think so | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Tue Mar 29 1994 07:34 | 7 |
|
No not this time. Lee Smith isn't around to dish up a gopher ball to
Alan Trammel.
HTH
Jerry
|
88.969 | stupid weather | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Tue Mar 29 1994 09:20 | 6 |
|
Yabbut will Fenway have all the snow cleared by Monday?
;^)
|
88.970 | no mo snow... | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Wed Mar 30 1994 06:43 | 3 |
| snow is just 'bout gone in these thair hills...
stig
|
88.971 | An August Red Sox fan's view | AKOCOA::BREEN | Till Time Shall be no More | Wed Mar 30 1994 12:43 | 9 |
| Well despite all the hype we have two position changes plus right field
which will be manned last year's centerfielder.
cf defense is up, rf defense is up (nixon and hatcher/blosser?).
Dawson healthy.
Clemons healthy.
Two new catchers, hopefully overall defense here won't be hurt.
Not that dramatic. An optimist would hope for 4th.
|
88.972 | home dates | FRETZ::HEISER | another day in DECrestaurant | Thu Mar 31 1994 18:17 | 4 |
| Anyone have the home schedule for July?
thanks,
Mike
|
88.973 | why, you coming out here? | AKOCOA::BREEN | Till Time Shall be no More | Thu Mar 31 1994 18:20 | 1 |
|
|
88.974 | looks like it | FRETZ::HEISER | another day in DECrestaurant | Thu Mar 31 1994 18:38 | 2 |
| I wasn't able to take my boys to a Cactus league game, so I promised
them a trip to the best MLB park in the land.
|
88.975 | So your taking them to Wriggly field!!! | OLD1S::SYSTEM | | Thu Mar 31 1994 18:40 | 0 |
88.976 | | FRETZ::HEISER | another day in DECrestaurant | Thu Mar 31 1994 18:48 | 5 |
| > -< So your taking them to Wriggly field!!! >-
^^^^^^^
You spelled it wrong. Actually I'm going to the best park that has
seen a World Series game since TV was invented.
|
88.977 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Thu Mar 31 1994 18:50 | 12 |
| July...
1 Oak 7:05
2,3 Oak 1:05
4 Cal 1:05
5,6 Cal 7:05
7,8 Sea 7:05
9,10 Sea 1:05
29 Mil 7:05
30,31 Mil 1:05
Ticket office 617-267-1700
|
88.978 | | FRETZ::HEISER | another day in DECrestaurant | Thu Mar 31 1994 18:53 | 1 |
| Thanks Bob! Kind of ironic that they're all Cactus League teams.
|
88.979 | | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Tue Apr 05 1994 07:41 | 3 |
| clemens gets *shelled* again!!
stig
|
88.980 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Sylvia > Dean | Tue Apr 05 1994 12:57 | 3 |
| What a team! Greenwell at the plate when the winning run scores!
/Don
|
88.981 | And the guy singing the Anthem sucked too1 | CAMONE::WAY | It looks good in threes.... | Tue Apr 05 1994 13:17 | 30 |
| | <<< Note 88.980 by DZIGN::ROBICHAUD "Sylvia > Dean" >>>
|
He, big guy, I expect a royalty for the p-name....8^)
| What a team! Greenwell at the plate when the winning run scores!
How much does Greenwell suck. I mean how much does this guy suck?
He was so lame on that one play where he wanged the wall. Gawd, my mother
could have hung onto that ball.
Greenwell is a liability in the field.
BTW, to those that were at the game with us, the kid in front of me,
(the one with the crutches) said that on the radio, they said that
last season Greenwell hit the wall 15 times. Good thing he ain't
a NASCAR racer, eh?
Kev got to sit in front of Miss "Buns of Steel" and her Hitler Youth
boyfriend, and Bill sat in front of the guy with the fake leg.
Oh yeah, the only one who sucked more than Greenwell yesterday was
the new PA Announcer. Man, she sucked WICKED bad.... I'll be
Sherm was spinning in his grave....
'Saw
|
88.982 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Sylvia > Dean | Tue Apr 05 1994 14:21 | 12 |
| � Oh yeah, the only one who sucked more than Greenwell yesterday was
� the new PA Announcer. Man, she sucked WICKED bad.... I'll be
� Sherm was spinning in his grave....
'Saw, I told you yesterday that Sherm Feller is dead. You can't
have him as the PA announcer anymore. Sherm more than anybody could've
accepted that fact. Much like with a ballplayer I'm not going to make a
determination on Leslie Sterling after just one game. Hey she's a Harvard
graduate, a member of a band and a long time baseball fan (found all this
out from today's Globe). I say give her a chance and let go of the past.
/Don
|
88.983 | Can her, get someone GOOD... | CAMONE::WAY | It looks good in threes.... | Tue Apr 05 1994 14:27 | 18 |
| Sherm Feller, to a Red Sox fan, was similar to the late
John Facenda, who folks will remember as the voice behind
the early NFL films efforts.
Facenda, it was often said, was "the voice of God".
Feller, for a Sox fan was the authortarian voice of the
Red Sox God.
At any rate, yes, I realize that Sherm is gone, but clearly
his successor should have some power and authority and
some carrying power.
Yesterday's PA effort made Greenwell's performance on the field
look like a HoF effort.....
'Saw
|
88.984 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | TFO has been TFSO'd | Tue Apr 05 1994 14:55 | 9 |
| > Feller, for a Sox fan was the authortarian voice of the Red Sox God.
'Saw, all Red Sox fans know there is no God. Otherwise that ball
wouldn't have gone between Buckner's legs, Gedman would've caught
Stanley's pitch, and Armbrister would've been called out for
interference. If their is a Red Sox God, he has either very weak
powers or a cruel sense of humor.
bruce, a Red Sox Atheist
|
88.985 | she stays........ | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Tue Apr 05 1994 15:07 | 11 |
|
Yabbut 'saw but I betcha didn't know that the new PA is also
a wimmin of color (Courtesy of 'BCN radion).
hth!
I remain,
sayin thanks again for the ride
Kev
|
88.986 | solve your theological dilemma :-) | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Tue Apr 05 1994 15:22 | 9 |
| Brews 'ya got it ALL wrong.
The Red Sox God is the "vengeful god", the merciful one is reserved
for other teams.
HtH
The Crazy Met
|
88.987 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Apr 05 1994 15:46 | 10 |
|
It's going to take awhile to get used to not hearing Sherm
Feller's voice. It's going to take longer to get used to hear-
ing a women's voice over the PA at Fenway. But I think the woman
deserves a bit longer tryout than one game before we send her
packing. She was understandably nervous and we're entrnched
in our ways. We both need a little time to get used to each
other and I'm sure things will work out fine. If not we'll
kick her in the ass and send her on her way.
|
88.988 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | 26/8=3.25 --- 8 tough loses | Tue Apr 05 1994 17:24 | 5 |
|
Besides she was chosen out of 101 applicants, all of who had tryouts. Yesterday was an exiting day for
everyone. Once she calms down and gets a few games under her belt, she will be all right.
Ron
|
88.989 | | CAMONE::WAY | It looks good in threes.... | Tue Apr 05 1994 17:36 | 18 |
| Okay, you all convinced me.
I have no problem with her being a woman. I mean, that's perfectly fine.
I guess I'm just used to that authortarian "presence" wafting over the
park.
I guess I'll take Tommy's tack, and say, give her a few games, and see
how she does.
I will hereby reserve any final judgement until Patriot's Day. But you can
all bet that I will be listening VERY closely that day.
To me, the ULTIMATE announcer would be James Earl Jones.... To hear him
say "Now batting for Mike Greenwell" would be lyrical, powerful, compelling
and most of all, music to my ears......
'Saw
|
88.990 | James Earl Jones | GENRAL::WADE | So, what's on your alleged mind? | Tue Apr 05 1994 17:39 | 6 |
|
Speaking of JEJ, did you happen to catch the Letterman show
where they had "Words That Sound Cool When Spoken By James
Earl Jones" (or something like that)? Made me giggle.
Claybone
|
88.991 | | GENRAL::WADE | So, what's on your alleged mind? | Tue Apr 05 1994 17:40 | 3 |
|
...to clarify that a little, they had JEJ come out and speak
the words....
|
88.992 | | CAMONE::WAY | It looks good in threes.... | Tue Apr 05 1994 17:44 | 17 |
| No, I missed that. Man, I wish I could have seen it.
JEJ, to me, is one of the best voices of all time. To think that as
a kid he suffered from a speech impediment makes it even better.
My top two voices of all time are JEJ and the late John Facenda....
To hear Facenda say something like
"But now time was running out on the Vikings
and all of Foreman's efforts were to naught,
and Fran Tarkenton's passes found their way
to Raider's hands...."
Goose bumps, man, goose bumps.....
'Saw
|
88.993 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 10:54 | 3 |
| Now that Bob "The Steamer" Stanley, and Jim Rice aren't there to kick
around any more, the fans have apparently latched on to Mike Greenwell
as their favorite whipping boy.
|
88.994 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:02 | 6 |
| > around any more, the fans have apparently latched on to Mike Greenwell
> as their favorite whipping boy.
And with good reason.
Quite frankly, he sucks.
|
88.995 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:13 | 7 |
| �And with good reason.
�
�Quite frankly, he sucks.
Yeah, just like Stanley and Rice sucked. He is the only player on the
Sox roster with a +.300 average. He was the second most productive
hitter for the Sox last season (behind Mo Vaughn).
|
88.996 | And he wanted *5 million*! | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:20 | 12 |
| > Yeah, just like Stanley and Rice sucked. He is the only player on the
> Sox roster with a +.300 average. He was the second most productive
> hitter for the Sox last season (behind Mo Vaughn).
Yep. And he sucks.
My dead grandmother could play left field better.
'Saw
|
88.997 | is firing a manager a sport? | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:21 | 13 |
|
Yabbut I'm getting a real good set of chuckles with the
media all predicting when (not "if") Hobson gets the boot! Sheesh,
we're all of 1 game into the season, the Sox are undefeated and they're
already got the tar and feathers ready.
What's going on??????
I remain,
figgering that if it rains today, they may remain undefeated!
Kev
|
88.998 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:31 | 10 |
| � -< And he wanted *5 million*! >-
If you saw some guys making this kind of money for doing the same job
and putting in a similar performance, wouldn't you ask for it? He
settled for 3 million and throughout the process kept emphasizing he
wanted to stay in Boston.
on Hobson: There seem to be 2 camps out there. One camp is predicting
that Duquette is looking for any excuse to fire Butch. The other camp
is saying that Duquette will give Hobson a good long look.
|
88.999 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:35 | 25 |
| > If you saw some guys making this kind of money for doing the same job
> and putting in a similar performance, wouldn't you ask for it? He
> settled for 3 million and throughout the process kept emphasizing he
> wanted to stay in Boston.
He sucks.
We have 2/3 of a good solid outfield. Unfortunately, left field is
really, really weak.
And I don't really care what his numbers are like, if it's a clutch
situation, you don't want Greenwell at the plate. He's got Dean disease....
> on Hobson: There seem to be 2 camps out there. One camp is predicting
> that Duquette is looking for any excuse to fire Butch. The other camp
> is saying that Duquette will give Hobson a good long look.
Hobson should get a look, definitely. But not so long that it will be
detrimental. I mean, when you come right down to it, he's not much
better than "Six, Two, and Even"
'SAw
|
88.1000 | just to beat heiser! ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:38 | 1 |
|
|
88.1001 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:41 | 12 |
| �We have 2/3 of a good solid outfield. Unfortunately, left field is
�really, really weak.
Left fielders are rarely known for their defensive prowess. FWIW,
Greenwell had only 2 errors last season in around 140 chances. Yes, OF
generally get the benefit of the doubt from the scorers.
�And I don't really care what his numbers are like, if it's a clutch
�situation, you don't want Greenwell at the plate. He's got Dean disease....
Sorry, 'Saw, but the numbers say Greenwell was one of the top 10 clutch
hitters in the AL last year.
|
88.1002 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:49 | 16 |
| |
| Sorry, 'Saw, but the numbers say Greenwell was one of the top 10 clutch
| hitters in the AL last year.
Well, numbers don't tell everything. I don't ever remember Greenwell
doing anything that spectacular when the game was on the line.
At any rate, he sure as hell didn't play like a 3 million dollar man
on Monday.
As to defense in left, the Sox have a rich tradition of good left
fielders. Greenwell couldn't carry Rice's jock, let alone Yaz's.....
'Saw
|
88.1003 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 12:08 | 18 |
| �Well, numbers don't tell everything. I don't ever remember Greenwell
�doing anything that spectacular when the game was on the line.
So, did you watch 162 games last year? Anecdotal evidence doesn't tell
the whole story.
�At any rate, he sure as hell didn't play like a 3 million dollar man
�on Monday.
And Clemens didn't pitch like a 6 million dollar man either. It's one
game.
�As to defense in left, the Sox have a rich tradition of good left
�fielders. Greenwell couldn't carry Rice's jock, let alone Yaz's.....
And Rice took grief because he wasn't Yaz, and Yaz took grief because
he wasn't Williams, and Williams took grief because he didn't get along
with the press, and ...
|
88.1004 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 12:11 | 22 |
| | So, did you watch 162 games last year? Anecdotal evidence doesn't tell
| the whole story.
No, I saw quite a few, and listened to a lot on the radio.
| And Clemens didn't pitch like a 6 million dollar man either. It's one
| game.
You're right. But I'd much rather have Clemens, based on potential
alone, than to have Greenwell with that Gainesville Ego of his...
| And Rice took grief because he wasn't Yaz, and Yaz took grief because
| he wasn't Williams, and Williams took grief because he didn't get along
| with the press, and ...
Rice took grief because he was perceived to hit into so many double
plays. He was no Fred Lynn and he wasn't Yaz, but he did a solid job
in left field.
|
88.1006 | Williams >> Yaz > Rice > Greenwell >> Hatcher FWIW | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Wed Apr 06 1994 12:25 | 12 |
|
Hey Saw....
A couple of replies ago you said the the Sox have 2/3 of a solid
outfield. Your not trying to say the Hatcher is a solid outfielder
are you. I'd take Greenie over that butcher any day. Greenwell
is very consistant in left. Consistantly he will not make the "good"
play but will make the routine plays and give you a .300/14/80 season
at the plate. Hatcher couldn't put up those numbers in a career year.
Jerry
|
88.1007 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Wed Apr 06 1994 12:25 | 10 |
|
I think it's as simple as frustrated Red Sox fans needing a whipping
boy and it's Mike's turn. These are the same fans that shamelessly
booed Roger last year even though for years Roger has been the only
Sox player worth the price of admission by himself. Of course, if
Roger or Greenwell goes on a tear Red Sox fans develop instant am-
nesia and forget how down they were on these guys. Boston cabbies
don't turn as quickly as the Fenway Faithless. Greenwell isn't
going to make anyone forget Yaz but the guy will get his 15-20 home
runs a year and 85-95 RBIs not great numbers but solid.
|
88.1008 | Will that get set hidden??? | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Wed Apr 06 1994 12:27 | 3 |
|
Well REK tell us how you really fell.
|
88.1009 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | 26/8=3.25 --- 8 tough loses | Wed Apr 06 1994 12:28 | 5 |
|
So far in my book Butch Hobson is a bum. Letting Clemens throw 105
pitches while getting killed is inexcuseable.
Ron
|
88.1010 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 12:35 | 27 |
| I think Hatcher is much better in right than he was in center. I think
he'll do a solid job batting #2 behind Otis. He certainly came through
on Monday.
As to Greenwell, I've beend down on him for years, and I don't care if he
put of HoF numbers this year, it still wouldn't change my mind.
Roger. I think Roger's going to have a good season. I agree that Butch
never should have let him throw that many pitches......
re REK:
Well, if you don't like the bleachers, don't sit there. 8^)
Another option, btw, is to go down to McCoy. /Don speaks
very highly of it, and while I've never been there, it's
got to be a) cheaper, and b) you're probably closer to
the field.
New Britain is a great stadium for kids too, even though
they can't partake of the Sam Adams....8^)
'Saw
|
88.1011 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | TFO has been TFSO'd | Wed Apr 06 1994 12:48 | 6 |
| >when Bankhead went to warm up some XXXXXXX XXXXXXX decided to
>throw a lighted m-60 firecracker in the Red Sox bullpen... Yes
>it went off....
Mebbe vince Coleman was taking advantage of the off day and flew to
Fenway?
|
88.1012 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Sylvia > Dean | Wed Apr 06 1994 13:13 | 4 |
| Come on BigMac. Comparing Greenwell to Rice is like comparing
Madonna to Katherine Hepburn.
/Don
|
88.1013 | Hobson has no sense of the game... | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Wed Apr 06 1994 13:17 | 14 |
| Getting back to Butch Hobson is a bum....
The 1st game of the year and the guy showed his true knowledge of how
and when a pitcher should be taken out of a game. I found myself
yelling at the TV set (my wife thinks I'm crazy!) on the Butch Hobson
decision of leaving Rog in the game after getting crushed and with no
outs and 2 doubles leading off the 5th or was it 6th inning and leaving
him in there to find themselves losing by 2 after in which they were
winning by 2 coming into the inning. He has *no* sense of when a
pitcher should be taken out of a ballgame. After getting crushed all
game and coming into the 5th/6th inning with your pitch count way up
there and not taking him out after 2 doubles in a row it doesn't take
that much brains to figure its time to yank him...
stig
|
88.1014 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Wed Apr 06 1994 13:20 | 5 |
| REK thanks for that note. I have saved it for a rainy day when the folks
in here start lambasting the way fans in othe places behave.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1015 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Sylvia > Dean | Wed Apr 06 1994 13:31 | 4 |
| Hey Craze, just one M80 blowing up in the bullpen would've been
considered a quiet day in Shea or Yankee stadium...
/Don
|
88.1016 | | MKFSA::LONG | That's my story and I'm stickin' to it! | Wed Apr 06 1994 13:34 | 13 |
| re a few back:
It was the top of the 5th when the Tigers got those two 'doubles'.
I put it in quotes because the first should definitly have been an
E-9. That was the one the 'Saw's HoF pick ran into the Green
Monster.
As far as the M60 (sure you don't mean M80?) thing goes it scared the
bejesus outa me, and I was 24 rows away from the bullpen. It musta
been someone's idea of a wake-up call to the bullpen. You know, now
that I think about it there were a lot of NY fans down in that area.
billl
|
88.1017 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 13:36 | 16 |
| > It was the top of the 5th when the Tigers got those two 'doubles'.
> I put it in quotes because the first should definitly have been an
> E-9. That was the one the 'Saw's HoF pick ran into the Green
> Monster.
Uh, E-7, right? I thought RF was 9.
> As far as the M60 (sure you don't mean M80?) thing goes it scared the
> bejesus outa me, and I was 24 rows away from the bullpen. It musta
> been someone's idea of a wake-up call to the bullpen. You know, now
> that I think about it there were a lot of NY fans down in that area.
They probably coulda used an M60 down in the bullpen. You'd have had
a clear shot at Greenwell from there....8^)
|
88.1018 | | MKFSA::LONG | That's my story and I'm stickin' to it! | Wed Apr 06 1994 13:49 | 16 |
| >>Uh, E-7, right? I thought RF was 9.
Uh, that's what I meant.
Hatcher, as I recall, was kinda lazy hisself out there in right on
Monday. I remember him very lazily watching a ball drop in front
of him. I guess he didn't want to attempt a dive and get his uni
all dirty. Musta been taking baseball card pics that day.
Now that I think about it the whole bloomin' team looked like they
were just going through the motions. That was the poorest execution
of a 5-4-3 double play I've seen in a long time. Needless to say,
the runner was safe at first.
billl
|
88.1019 | | FRETZ::HEISER | another day in DECrestaurant | Wed Apr 06 1994 13:49 | 5 |
| > -< Will that get set hidden??? >-
> Well REK tell us how you really fell.
according to the Orangebook section on abuse of DEC systems it should
be set hidden, no matter how right it is.
|
88.1020 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 14:10 | 12 |
| �You're right. But I'd much rather have Clemens, based on potential
�alone, than to have Greenwell with that Gainesville Ego of his...
Ah, here it is. It's not that Greenwell is a bad player, it's just
that you don't like his personality.
�Rice took grief because he was perceived to hit into so many double
�plays.
Rice did hit into a lot of double plays. Yes, he took his share of
abuse for it. His main problem though was that he wasn't Yaz and he,
like Williams, didn't get along with the press.
|
88.1021 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 14:14 | 13 |
| � Getting back to Butch Hobson is a bum....
� The 1st game of the year and the guy showed his true knowledge of how
� and when a pitcher should be taken out of a game.
I thought that was what Mike Roarke (the guy who replaced Rich Gale for
no apparent reason) was paid for.
�I found myself
� yelling at the TV set (my wife thinks I'm crazy!) on the Butch Hobson
� decision of leaving Rog in the game after getting crushed and with no
� outs and 2 doubles leading off the 5th or was it 6th inning and leaving
It was the fourth, wasn't it?
|
88.1022 | Cleaner version... | USCTR1::KING | Cemeteries = Parks with nice stones... | Wed Apr 06 1994 14:20 | 11 |
| Opening day... The animals in the bleachers....
The *^%#@& morons that sit near the Red Sox bullpen....
Oh yes, when Bankhead went to warm up some ^$@%&&* a*s*o*e decided
to throw a lighted m-60 firecracker in the Red Sox bullpen...
Yes it went off....
I can't wait to take Jesse to a game and see Boston's finest
fans show their support for the home town team....
REK
|
88.1023 | Zimmer >>>> Butcher.... ain't say'n much | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Wed Apr 06 1994 14:34 | 17 |
|
This more about Hobson being a bum and absolutely the worst
manager in baseball. We all have watched the Butcher live by
the righty/lefty sac bunt Sparky Anderson book for 2+ years
now. With 107 year old Kirk (.159 lifetime against Clemens)
Gibson (a lefty) at the dish he intentionally walks him to face
Alan (.350+ lifetime against Clemens) Trammell (a righty) to
set up the righty on righty pithcer hitter thang, what happens
but a bullet to the outfield a couple runs score blah blah blah.
My question is how long can this inept moron last?
Oh I heard that Hobson lives in Westboro off of route 30
about 1 mile from where I live if anyone can confirm this I can
take him out tonight. ( many :*) )
Jerry
|
88.1024 | | BALL4::KURAS | Joe Kuras | Wed Apr 06 1994 14:44 | 6 |
| Jerry -
...don't know fer sure, but I heard he lived up on the hill behind
the ice cream barn. You know, the place where they tore down that
mansion that never sold, and put in that upscale development.
/joe
|
88.1025 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:08 | 27 |
| |
| Ah, here it is. It's not that Greenwell is a bad player, it's just
| that you don't like his personality.
|
That's only a part of it. He could be a much better fielder than he
is if he was willing to work at it.
As much as I got on Boggs sometimes, the guy always took extra fielding
practice to make himself better.
Greenwell will never be a Yaz, but with some practice, he could be a
decent left fielder, and get to and catch balls like the one on Monday.
| Rice did hit into a lot of double plays. Yes, he took his share of
| abuse for it. His main problem though was that he wasn't Yaz and he,
| like Williams, didn't get along with the press.
He did, but I read an article somewhere that said they weren't as damaging
as the stats might have shown.
Not many who are as good as Yaz or Williams....
'Saw
|
88.1026 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:17 | 14 |
| Yaz had the arm. He learned to take the ball right off the wall instead of
waiting for the hop then he'd gun it in to 2nd nailing the guy trying to
stretch the single into a Fenway double.
Otis Nixon looks pretty good out in center. There haven't been many fast
center fielders on the Red Sox. Tris Speaker was probably the best. They say no
one could play shallow and go back to get a ball like he did.
Didn't Nixon score an important run near the end of the opener? Tris Speaker
was in the middle of that 10th inning rally that won the deciding game 8 of the
1912 World Series.
Otis Nixon, the next Tris Speaker,
George
|
88.1027 | Greenwell not that bad, says here | AKOCOA::BREEN | Till Time Shall be no More | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:30 | 18 |
| I disagree with 'saw on greenwell though I haven't seen the non-catch.
I only heard that he collided with the wall something rice and yaz
probably never would have done.
Greenwell achieves the maximum on defense and overall has improved
quite a bit. He has the misfortune of making the occasional bad play
but people forget his high assist totals.
Rice was a great fielder when he chose to be. A better left fielder
than Yaz when Rice was at his peak. Unfortuneatly he loafed.
Williams was actually an excellent left fielder thru until after the
korean war and even in late fifties played the wall well.
There are so many outfielders in big leagues today who throw so poorly
today that greenwell has to be considered above average in left. For
Sox last year he was the best at his outfield position, said fact being
the biggest factor in sox demise.
|
88.1028 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:35 | 11 |
| � Yaz had the arm. He learned to take the ball right off the wall instead of
�waiting for the hop then he'd gun it in to 2nd nailing the guy trying to
�stretch the single into a Fenway double.
Greenwell has also done this, as have opposing left fielders visiting
Fenway. Some have said that the Green Monster is overrated.
� Didn't Nixon score an important run near the end of the opener?
Nixon scored the winning run on a passed ball that glanced off the
catcher's mitt and went to the backstop.
|
88.1029 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:35 | 34 |
| |
| Yaz had the arm. He learned to take the ball right off the wall instead of
|waiting for the hop then he'd gun it in to 2nd nailing the guy trying to
|stretch the single into a Fenway double.
|
One of my favorite Yaz plays was in a nothing game, a guy on 3rd.
He took the ball on the fly fairly deep and nailed the throw straight
to the catcher. The guy on 3rd had thought about it, but Yaz's throw
just kind of said "Oh yeah?"
> Otis Nixon looks pretty good out in center. There haven't been many fast
>center fielders on the Red Sox. Tris Speaker was probably the best. They say no
>one could play shallow and go back to get a ball like he did.
The fans seem to like him. The bleacher bums were doing the Tomahawk
Chop at one point, and chanting "Otis, Otis"....
> Didn't Nixon score an important run near the end of the opener?
He was on 3rd and scored the winner on the WP.
BTW, the thing that blew me away about Nixon was his speed. When he stole
his base he didn't have very much of a lead at all. He wasn't even up
to where the grass start on the baseline (at the little semicircle cutout).
The pitcher was really worried, and threw to first a lot. Otis took a
tad of a lead, and then was off to the races.... The man definitely
has SPEED....
'Saw
|
88.1030 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:36 | 2 |
| By the way, 'Saw's hero Mike "Gator" Greenwell hit a 3 run homer to tie
the game up with the Tigers.
|
88.1031 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:39 | 26 |
| |� Yaz had the arm. He learned to take the ball right off the wall instead of
|�waiting for the hop then he'd gun it in to 2nd nailing the guy trying to
|�stretch the single into a Fenway double.
|
| Greenwell has also done this, as have opposing left fielders visiting
| Fenway. Some have said that the Green Monster is overrated.
But not like Yaz did. Plus, Yaz could get off the ground and go up the
wall and get them.
As to the Green Monster being overrated, you've got to stop reading
those Woostah papers 8^)
Seriously, the opposing left fielders who do that are more than likely
guys who've played there before.
The corner is tough with the caroms, and the top of the wall is tough.
The best thing, and I've never seen Greenwell do this, although in his
defense he might, I've seen Rice and Yaz do this, and that's when the
ball goes over their head -- they stop, as if it's gone, to try and
lull the runner into slowing down. Then they motor up, collect the
ball off the wall and make the peg to second.... I like that.
'Saw
|
88.1032 | practicing my New England Fan-Flop | MKFSA::LONG | That's my story and I'm stickin' to it! | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:42 | 7 |
| >> By the way, 'Saw's hero Mike "Gator" Greenwell hit a 3 run homer to tie
>> the game up with the Tigers.
He's the 'best'!
billl
|
88.1033 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:44 | 10 |
| Hey, how much does Greenwell SUCK. Probably got a lucky pitch.....
8^)
Is the PA announcer doing better I wonder?
'saw
|
88.1034 | updated scores? | FSDEV::MGARCIA | | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:44 | 6 |
| Does anyone have the latest score? Is this the correct place to get
Red Sox day game updated scores? All the NOTES that I used to use I
can't get into anymore. Many thanks.
Mike
|
88.1035 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:44 | 14 |
| |
| Does anyone have the latest score? Is this the correct place to get
| Red Sox day game updated scores? All the NOTES that I used to use I
| can't get into anymore. Many thanks.
|
Mac just said it was tied, but no inning or score.....
I guess here is as good a place as any......
'Saw
|
88.1036 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 15:53 | 2 |
| Mike Benoit is sending out game updates. There is information in
FREE::RED_SOX note 508 on how to get them via WWW, UCX, and MAIL.
|
88.1037 | | SALEM::DODA | Tied to the whippin' post | Wed Apr 06 1994 16:00 | 7 |
| My favorite Yaz play was the fake he used once or twice a year on
a ball that was going to be off the wall. He'd stand at the base
of the wall as if he were camping under the ball and at the last
minute turn take the ball off the wall and hold the hitter to a
single and sometimes freeze any runners who were on at the time.
daryll
|
88.1038 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 16:02 | 2 |
| 'Saw and daryll, I don't think there is a LF in the American League who
doesn't use that deke on balls off the Green Monster.
|
88.1039 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 16:15 | 1 |
| Yeah, but I think Yaz originated that move. All the rest are copycats....8^)
|
88.1040 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | 26/8=3.25 --- 8 tough loses | Wed Apr 06 1994 16:22 | 6 |
|
Yeah, but Greenwell misplayed another ball in Left Field resulting
in a double and a couple of runs for Detroit during the top of the inning.
So he hit the 3 run homer to make up for his mistake.
Ron
|
88.1041 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Wed Apr 06 1994 16:24 | 10 |
| > Yeah, but Greenwell misplayed another ball in Left Field resulting
>in a double and a couple of runs for Detroit during the top of the inning.
>So he hit the 3 run homer to make up for his mistake.
Ah HAH! The truth comes out.....
Sounds like he's quickly developing Sam Horn disease -- Big Stick, No Glove.
'Saw
|
88.1042 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Apr 06 1994 16:26 | 6 |
| If Gant comes to Boston and the Hawk retires he will probably end up moving
to DH anyway. Of course Gant doesn't exactly have a closet full of Golden
Gloves either.
:*)}
George
|
88.1043 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | breakin' rocks, in the hot sun | Wed Apr 06 1994 16:46 | 4 |
|
5-4
Soxs in the sixth
|
88.1044 | 1912? | GENRAL::WADE | So, what's on your alleged mind? | Wed Apr 06 1994 17:39 | 4 |
|
Tris Speaker was overrated! :*)
Claybone
|
88.1045 | | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Wed Apr 06 1994 17:45 | 51 |
|
Here's what I think of Greenwell.
Defensively- Adequate at BEST in LF. Has low to average range, less
than average arm. You don't see many runners shakin'
with trepidation rounding third.
I give credit for his hustle but that
hustle is making up for mental mistakes and misjudging
the ball. Case in point was that "crash" into the wall
on Opening Day. Greenie misjudged that line drive, came
in a coupla steps, then HAD to race back to try and
catch it. Great effort but typical untalented reaction
from Greenie. He does not have the talent period.
Offensively- Now the man has the talent in this department. He's
an excellent contact hitter (I wish he utilized his power
more). but he shows little patience at the bat. Too often
he jumps at pitches and doesn't work the pitcher. This
is the thing that galls me the most about Greenwell.
He could more productive than he is if he developed that
patience. Case in point; Opening Day again.
I believe it was the fifth inning or so. Mike Moore had
just thrown *8* consecutive balls; runners on 1st and 2nd.
Greenwell gets up and jumps on that first pitch; line out
to CF. He prolly thinks he got "his" pitch, but don't
y'all think the pitchers have the "book" on Greenie?
Moore probably was either gonna groove a too high hard
one (which he did) that Greenie would bite on or a
low and outside curve to bite. The result was too
predictable.
And the most galling thang about that half-inning was that
Mo Vaughn followed Greenie and worked Moore to perfection;
ran the count to 3-2, fouled off a few nasties and the
proceeded to club a line shot single to RF for a RBI.
Baserunning- Average.
What it boils down to is that Greenie has better than average offensive
skills but doesn't maximize it because of sporadic plate patience;
less than avrerage defensive skills. Those two Opening Day scenarios
illustrate exactly what galls me about Greenwell.
Throw in the fact the he thinks he's a Puckett, Clark, Palmiero and
the boy has rocks in his haid. He ain't worth 2 mill in this
overinflated market, never mind 5 mill.
If the Sox could get something decent for him, I'd trade him.. and
yes I do think he adds *offensively* to the Sox, but he could do more
with that talent.
MikeL
|
88.1046 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 17:51 | 13 |
| Well, Mike, that "sporadic" hitter has a career batting average of over
.300. Most players would kill to be that "sporadic".
Yes, he does do a lot of first pitch swinging. He's always remembered
for making an out on the first pitch. He's never remembered for
getting a hit.
On the Opening day example you cited. Greenwell had a 50/50 chance.
Either Moore was going to groove one figuring noone is going to swing
at a pitch after 2 straight walks have been issued, or he'll continue
in his wild ways. From the sounds of it, if didn't sound like Mike
chased one out of the strike zone. Even when he is first pitch
swinging, he usually makes contact.
|
88.1047 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 06 1994 17:55 | 60 |
| Here's the final boxscore courtesy of Mike Benoit. Dawson has been
very effective in the first two games. Russell is 2 for 2 in the save
department. The guy the Sox picked up on waivers on the last day of
spring training registers a victory. So far, the top 2 Sox arms have
registered no decisions.
<<< FREE::USER4:[NOTES$LIBRARY]RED_SOX.NOTE;2 >>>
-< Boston Red Sox >-
================================================================================
Note 508.44 OPENING DAY UPDATES 44 of 44
CADSYS::CADSYS::BENOIT 47 lines 6-APR-1994 15:57
-< here's the final >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AROUND THE LEAGUE...brought to you by: The New York Stock Exchange, we boast
more corrections since 1960, than the Cleveland Indians!
TEX: 0 NY: 0 (RAINED OUT)
April 6th, 1994
+-----------+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---++---+---+---+
| TEAMS | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 || R | H | E |
+-----------+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---++---+---+---+
| Tigers | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 || 4 | 8 | 0 |
+ ----------+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---++---+---+---+
| Red Sox | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | x || 5 | 7 | 1 |
+ ----------+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---++---+---+---+
WP: Trlicek S: Russell LP: Wells
Tigers
------
Phillips -lf GO -- PO GO -- -- 1b -- 1b
Samuel -2b BB -- -- PO 1b -- 1b -- xx
Whitaker -ph xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx DP
Davis -cf fO -- -- BB FO -- FC -- -- IP H ER BB K
Fielder -1b FO -- -- 3b� BB� -- FC� -- -- Wells 6.0 7 5 2 2
Fryman -3b -- LO -- 2b� K -- K -- -- Boever 2.0 0 0 0 1
Trammell -ss -- fO -- 1b K -- -- FO --
Tettleton -dh -- FO -- K -- K -- GO --
Bautista -rf -- -- e3* 2b� -- PO -- xx xx
Gibson -ph xx xx xx xx xx xx xx GO� --
Krueter -c -- -- FO BB -- GO� -- -- xx
Felix -ph xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx FO
Red Sox
-------
Nixon -cf GO -- -- bs GO -- FO -- --
Naerhing -3b FO -- -- 1b GO -- PO -- --
Greenwell -lf GO -- -- HR� -- GO -- PO -- IP H ER BB K
Vaughn -1b -- K -- 1b -- GO -- GO -- Viola 4.1 5 3 4 1
Dawson -dh -- FO -- 2b -- 2b -- fO -- Trlicek 1.2 0 0 0 3
Valentin -ss -- FO -- BB -- BBi -- -- -- Harris 2.0 2 1 0 1
Valle -c -- -- FO K -- 3b� -- -- -- Russell 1.0 1 0 0 0
Tinsley -rf -- -- FO DP -- fO� -- -- --
Fletcher -2b -- -- FO -- GO -- K -- --
bs = bunt single
� = pitching change
*-caught stealing
BBi = intentional walk
|
88.1048 | | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Wed Apr 06 1994 18:07 | 13 |
| Mac,
I said Greenwell had sporadic patience at the plate, not that he
is a "spradic" hitter. I stated that he had better than average
offensive skills and is an excellent contact hitter. But I think
he could be a better situation hitter if he showed more patience.
He overestimates his worth (but who doesn't). I ain't askin' for
his hide but I believe his days here are numbered. But let's do
it intelligently. Either get something of value or find a way to
get more out of him (where's that batting instructor?).
MikeL
|
88.1049 | Speaker,Enos and the art of the bunt | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Apr 06 1994 18:47 | 22 |
| Connie Mack regarded Tris Speaker as the best and he included DiMaggio
in the comparison. But probably not Mays.
Along with playing shallow and the ability to go back on the ball
(something almost non-existent today) Speaker perfected the shoestring
catch.
Today for reasons unknown to me, outfielders tend to slide and dive for
balls instead of catching the ball at the shoetops. Perhaps there
taught this or not taught the "shoestring".
Other mysteries include holding the bat with two hands down near the
handle instead of sliding the top hand up to bunt (holding it with the
thumb and knuckles behind the bat - I heard someone mention that this
technique would result in a broken finger or thumb - NOT, it just takes
practice).
Finally Enos Slaughter is dead wrong. The strike zone has expanded in
the last decade or so, but apparently this is so subjective to be
unarguable.
Bill
|
88.1050 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Thu Apr 07 1994 08:32 | 14 |
| I don't like Greenwell. The reason is that he has an over-valued
opinion of himself.
However, I'm not sure he's entirely to blame for this. I think the
Boston media has a lot to do with his opinion of himself. He is not
the first player to suffer from this adulation before long-term
performance. He won't be the last, either. Not in Boston. Not with
the sports talk-shows, either.
Something I've been wondering about: Some retired jocks has made a
successful transition to the media. But, I can't think of a single
writer/talkshow host going into sports management. I mean, if these
writers and hosts are such experts in how a team should be run, how
come none of them have been hired to straighten out a team?
|
88.1051 | | KALI::MORGAN | | Thu Apr 07 1994 09:07 | 8 |
| If Mike Greenwell is a below average left fielder, could someone name
14 left fielders that are better than he is?
I'll get it started: 1) Barry Bonds
Feel free to add to the list. I can't wait to see it!
Steve
|
88.1052 | a more humble player too! ;^) | CNTROL::CHILDS | breakin' rocks, in the hot sun | Thu Apr 07 1994 09:48 | 4 |
|
2. Ricky Henderson
mike
|
88.1053 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Thu Apr 07 1994 10:00 | 11 |
| Are we talking current, or all time?
I thought about this a lot last night, and I'll give you the fact that
Greenwell can hit. But as was said yesterday, he a very impatient hitter,
and if he were a little MORE patient, he might be even better at the plate.
His fielding is atrocious....
'Saw
|
88.1054 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Thu Apr 07 1994 10:03 | 3 |
| Gee reading Mac's notes from yesterday, I'll bet he thinks the Red Sox had a
good year lasted year, since they were in contention until August. He probably
cain't understand why they brought in Douquette either.
|
88.1055 | | PUSH::HUBER | File and Forget | Thu Apr 07 1994 10:19 | 37 |
|
Better left fielders?
So far we've got:
1) Barry Bonds
2) Ricky Henderson
Let's see...
3) Albert Belle
4) Juan Gonzalez
5) Tim Raines
That's about it, at least as far as clear-cut cases. There's
a whole group, though, who are on about the same level as Greenwell
6) Ron Gant
7) Bernard Gilkey
8) Luis Gonzalez
9) Phil Plantier
10) Kevin Mitchell
11) Tony Phillips
12) Greg Vaughn
I don't see anyone else for whom a reasonable argument can be made.
Maybe Brady Anderson. Greenwell's clearly better than (among LF w/
200 AB last year) Browne, Felder, Gladden, C. Gwynn, D. James, Javier,
McCarty (at least for now), McReynolds, Munoz, Polonia, Velarde,
Alou, Boston, Clark, Coleman, Conine, E. Davis, Incaviglia, Martin,
May, Orsulak, and Thompson.
So he's no worse than 13th out of 35, and arguably 6th. Given his age,
signing him to a long term contract would have been foolhardy; a
smaller, two-year deal OTOH made a lot of sense...
Joe
|
88.1056 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Apr 07 1994 10:28 | 8 |
| � Today for reasons unknown to me, outfielders tend to slide and dive for
� balls instead of catching the ball at the shoetops. Perhaps there
� taught this or not taught the "shoestring".
To me the sliding catch is safer than the shoestring catch. If you are
sliding in to make the catch, if you don't get it you have a good
chance of blocking the ball with your body. If you go for the
shoestring catch and miss, it will probably roll to the wall.
|
88.1057 | Back from great vaca, with some fun baseball afternoons included... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Apr 07 1994 13:28 | 42 |
|
> 'Saw, I told you yesterday that Sherm Feller is dead. You can't
> have him as the PA announcer anymore. Sherm more than anybody could've
> accepted that fact. Much like with a ballplayer I'm not going to make a
> determination on Leslie Sterling after just one game. Hey she's a Harvard
> graduate, a member of a band and a long time baseball fan (found all this
> out from today's Globe). I say give her a chance and let go of the past.
My father and I met Ms. Sterling and her mother last summer in the SRO
ticket line at Camden Yards. At the very least I can verify that she
is a bonafide baseball fan (I didn't think she did that bad a job
either, although the blaring speakers in CF are much less forgiving to
the female voice than they were to Sherm). Those newspaper reports are
not just a product of some phony advance Red Sox PR work. Imagine my
surprise after opening the papers Tuesday morning and learning that the
woman I'd heard the day before was Frank Viola's biggest fan in the
city of Boston (she drove down there to see him pitch that night) and
had been selected from a mass audition as the Red Sox' new PA announcer!
Another great moment in Fenway Park yesterday. Mike Greenwell misplayed
that tracer bullet to left a bit and was really hearing it from several
leatherlungs when he came up to bat the next inning. Not far above the
on-deck circle, a couple of rows in front of me some bandwagoning Dallas
Cowboy fan, decked out to the hilt in blue and silver, was really tearing
into Greenwell. My brother and I had been grousing about the play but
this guy was beside himself, and completely obnoxious. He had a couple
of kids with him, too, and I started seething a bit. Having a few of
beers in me I decided to assure Greenwell that he should pay no attention
to this "loudmouth Cowboys fan" (I guess this is probably how Fenway fights
get started, but I wasn't thinking of that at the moment-- plus I had
help in reserve next to me, if necessary ;-). His response was "I may
be a loudmouth, but at least I know a stiff when I see one!". Two
pitches later the ball is over the bullpen and the guy is cheering wildly,
muttering something about "giving credit where it's due" while my bro
and I are high-fiving those around us. The lesson for Greenwell should
be to ignore the very vocal minority of bitter sick-pup frontrunners
(Greenwell received a very warm round of applause from most fans when the
game started) and let his bat do the talking. Hey, what can I say, as a
hitter and also personally, I like Mike, always have...
glenn
|
88.1058 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Thu Apr 07 1994 14:11 | 13 |
| I was NOT, repeat NOT in Fenway yesterday wearing blue and silver.
Just wanted to make that clear.
If it had been me, I still would have been on his ass, homer or no. After
blowing the play in the field, it's the least he could do to hit the homer.
8^)
Glenn, still got the beard?
'Saw
|
88.1059 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | 26/8=3.25 --- 8 tough loses | Thu Apr 07 1994 15:29 | 3 |
| Saw's favorite Left Fielder has hit another Home Run today. :^).
Ron
|
88.1060 | Greenwell -- the Jim McMahon of Baseball.... | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Thu Apr 07 1994 15:32 | 11 |
| >Saw's favorite Left Fielder has hit another Home Run today. :^).
Hey, did I tell you guys how much Greenwell SUCKS? How many E-7s were there
today?
'Saw
PS I can't lose -- the more I rag on the guy, the better he hits. If
I keep raggin', he might have a HoF year, and the Sox might do
something...... (Yeah, right Frank, go smoke another bone)
|
88.1061 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Clinton Impeachment: 14.2M+ signatures | Thu Apr 07 1994 16:18 | 1 |
| Fielder has hit a 2-run shot as well.
|
88.1062 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Apr 07 1994 16:47 | 37 |
| Now if only Fenway would start doing the same.
Article: 1183
From: [email protected] (Ken Firestone)
Newsgroups: alt.sports.baseball.balt-orioles,alt.beer,rec.food.drink.beer
Subject: Camden Yards and BEER!
Date: 7 Apr 1994 04:23:21 GMT
Organization: Clark Internet Services, Inc., Ellicott City, MD USA
The Baltimore Orioles are now serving a nice variety of microbrewery and
brewpub beer at their home games.
Just about all of the small brewers
from the state of Maryland are represented, including Oxford Class, Blue
Ridge, Wild Goose, all microwbrewerys; and Sissons, Warf Rat and
Baltimore Brewing, all Baltimore Brew Pubs. Both draft and bottled beer
is available.
In the past year I had read some discussion about microbrewerys at ball
parks, and gathered that some had one or two to choose from. I think that
the Orioles have now taken the lead, with a selection many a fine pub
would brag about.
BTW-The Fredrick MD Keys, a class A minor league has served Oxford Class
for several years, and Blue Ridge since the Brewery opened last year.
--
============================================================================
Ken Firestone, N3JBU | If you look at things right, its best not to know
[email protected] | who you really are. Because anything that happens
| to anybody who doesn't know who he really is
| actually happens to somebody else. So it makes no
| difference at all. -- Nelson Algren.
============================================================================
|
88.1063 | | PTOVAX::JACOB | An ordinary, average guy | Thu Apr 07 1994 17:07 | 10 |
|
>> <<< Note 88.1062 by PATE::MACNEAL "ruck `n' roll" >>>
>>Now if only Fenway would start doing the same.
If it's like most Major league parks, it'd only be $32 fer a 12 ounce
cup.
JaKe
|
88.1064 | maybe the urine smell would be a little better | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Thu Apr 07 1994 17:19 | 6 |
| >>Now if only Fenway would start doing the same.
Oh, that's all we need. All the beer swilling idjots who ruin things for
the crowd would love it if they actually had GOOD beer at Fenway. I can
see it now, fights every inning because somebody spilled somebody's $8
microbrew.
|
88.1065 | 8th inning, inning of maximum intoxicity. | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Apr 07 1994 17:26 | 10 |
| The thing I hate most about Fenway is the drunks. A couple years ago I bought
an $18 box ticket thinking I'd get away from it but the guys right next to me
got tanked and were screaming at the players by the 5th inning.
They say it's worse at Patriot games, is that true? Must be really bad.
I really use to hate '87 when the drunks would start in with "Hey Bucknah,
you losss da Woorlll Series!".
George
|
88.1066 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | Mets in '94 | Thu Apr 07 1994 19:23 | 9 |
| re: .1064
=bob=
ah, wouldn't make it any worse those guys would likely stick to the
large cups of Bud.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1067 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Thu Apr 07 1994 21:43 | 5 |
| I guess George and =Bob= would have really frowned on my
"Romine, you're a waste of skin" performance a few years
back....8^)
|
88.1068 | | KALI::MORGAN | | Fri Apr 08 1994 09:06 | 4 |
| Could you imagine the uproar had Greenwell missed that line drive that
Blosser miscued yesterday?! The wind would not have been an excuse.
Steve
|
88.1069 | Greenwell pulling about 3 Torr on the Suck Scale. | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Fri Apr 08 1994 10:00 | 8 |
| > Could you imagine the uproar had Greenwell missed that line drive that
> Blosser miscued yesterday?! The wind would not have been an excuse.
Greenwell was just thanking the good Lord that he wasn't out there to
field it. Otis Nixon yelled over that he'd "dodged a bullet"......
8^)
|
88.1070 | 3-0 so far! When's da parade? | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Fri Apr 08 1994 14:51 | 1 |
|
|
88.1071 | Parade in October! | FRETZ::HEISER | Clinton Impeachment: 14.4M+ signatures | Fri Apr 08 1994 14:52 | 1 |
|
|
88.1072 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Apr 08 1994 16:29 | 4 |
| If only there was some way to keep the Tigers in town and keep everyone
else out ...
George
|
88.1073 | why have it ? | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Apr 08 1994 16:32 | 2 |
| Can someone tell me why the Red_Sox notesfile is *apparently* taken down
when there's a day game ?
|
88.1074 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Fri Apr 08 1994 16:34 | 10 |
| >Can someone tell me why the Red_Sox notesfile is *apparently* taken down
>when there's a day game ?
Did you try getting at it on the new node? I seem to remember someone
saying it was moving, or in the process of, or something like that....
'Saw
|
88.1075 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Apr 08 1994 16:41 | 6 |
| You can't get in Joe? Oh yeah, that's right. We adopted a No Yankee
Fan rule in there.
Actually the conference moved. The notice was short, but I announced
it in topic 4 in this here conference.
|
88.1076 | Sox up 4-0 after 5 | FRETZ::HEISER | Clinton Impeachment: 14.4M+ signatures | Fri Apr 08 1994 17:30 | 1 |
|
|
88.1077 | Parade plans put on hold! | CAPNET::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Product Management | Mon Apr 11 1994 00:10 | 4 |
| Boy, Greenwell looked good on that liner into the left field corner,
eh?
Mark.
|
88.1078 | a man outstanding in his field | MKFSA::LONG | That's my story and I'm stickin' to it! | Mon Apr 11 1994 09:43 | 7 |
| Looks like they'll have to settle for 161-1.
Mike sure showed his defensive abilities on that one. Yes sir, he's
definitly one of the premier left fielder in the American League (NOT).
billl
|
88.1079 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Mon Apr 11 1994 09:55 | 5 |
| > Looks like they'll have to settle for 160-2.
'Saw
|
88.1080 | need help in OF... | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Mon Apr 11 1994 10:30 | 4 |
| looks like they have more than one deficiency in the field ala.
blosser...
stigmoli
|
88.1081 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Old Man and the PC | Mon Apr 11 1994 10:31 | 6 |
| Hey, the way some of those guys, play, I'm available.
I could be the next Roy Hobbs....
[lotsa 8^)]
|
88.1082 | Mail from JD. He agrees wif me! | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Mon Apr 11 1994 13:08 | 11 |
| From JD:
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
SaW -
How da hell are ya? Mike Greenwell is the best
fielder since Venus DeMilo..
JD
|
88.1083 | | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Mon Apr 11 1994 13:59 | 10 |
|
Yabbut Rog was able to reduce his ERA down to ~10.x!!!!!!!
IMO, it's all part of a master plan to win the Sigh Yun by suprise
;^)
HOBSON IS TOO BLAM!!!!(tm)
|
88.1084 | Is it all over? | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Mon Apr 11 1994 14:11 | 10 |
|
>> HOBSON IS TOO BLAM!!!!(tm)
that's a crock and you know it! Rog like all real men calls his own shots.
He don't let no stinkin' manager tell him when he's done for the day. What
I'm wondering is if he stays at 10.+ ERA will the boobirds ride him like
Greenteeth????????? and if they do will I have a party??????
;^)
|
88.1085 | | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Mon Apr 11 1994 14:12 | 3 |
| I dunno. I don't think Hobson handles his pitchers too well.....
'SAw
|
88.1086 | pull him early, and he's liabel to start a fight | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Mon Apr 11 1994 14:15 | 7 |
|
>> I dunno. I don't think Hobson handles his pitchers too well.....
that may indeed be true Sawmain but when it comes to Clem, he's hogtied.
mike
|
88.1087 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Apr 11 1994 14:24 | 3 |
| All the pitchers seem to be getting rocked so far. Randy Johnson gave
up 11 runs in less than 3 innings this weekend. There have been a lot
of high scoring games in this young season.
|
88.1088 | Greenwell is holding constant at 3 Torr.... | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Mon Apr 11 1994 14:49 | 20 |
| > All the pitchers seem to be getting rocked so far. Randy Johnson gave
> up 11 runs in less than 3 innings this weekend. There have been a lot
> of high scoring games in this young season.
Some (sportscasters,analysts) are saying that the ball is jacked up and
more lively this year.
Your point might be evidence of that.
And Mike Childs, I'm ashamed of you! You should know that Roger is the
epitome of the team player, who just wants to take them one at a time,
and do whatever he can to help the ball club, but he's awfully glad just
to be there....8^)
'Saw
|
88.1089 | my 8-year-old couldn't believe it! | TNPUBS::ALVEY | The Revolution will NOT be televised | Mon Apr 11 1994 14:57 | 5 |
| Chisox on 2nd and 3rd, Frank Thomas at the plate,
1st base open, and they allow Hesketh to throw
something he can hit?
Who is in charge over there?
dr.a
|
88.1090 | | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Mon Apr 11 1994 15:18 | 6 |
| >Chisox on 2nd and 3rd, Frank Thomas at the plate,
>1st base open, and they allow Hesketh to throw
>something he can hit?
>Who is in charge over there?
Hobson is up to 2 Torr on the Chainsaw "How Much Do They Suck" Scale.....
|
88.1091 | Hobson must rate at least a 6 | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Mon Apr 11 1994 15:55 | 5 |
|
Saw how can Casey be an 8+ and the Butcher only a 2??
Jerry
|
88.1092 | Hobson's climbing towards 6 Torr.... | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Mon Apr 11 1994 16:07 | 16 |
| > -< Hobson must rate at least a 6 >-
>
>
>
> Saw how can Casey be an 8+ and the Butcher only a 2??
Well, I just put Hobson on the scale, and I alway give everyone a
break the first time they get on the scale.
Besides, I used to date this girl Maureen about 7 years ago, and she
was the highest debut EVER on the scale, (at 5 Torr) and for sentimental
reasons, I'd like her to keep that record, so I couldn't put Laverne on
at 6 right off.....
'SAw
|
88.1093 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Apr 11 1994 17:07 | 8 |
| >Chisox on 2nd and 3rd, Frank Thomas at the plate,
>1st base open, and they allow Hesketh to throw
>something he can hit?
>Who is in charge over there?
Noted Red Sox killer Franco is on deck. You have to pitch to Thomas
and hope for the best. It ain't Hobson's fault if Hesketh throws up a
meatball.
|
88.1094 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Mon Apr 11 1994 17:16 | 16 |
| |>Chisox on 2nd and 3rd, Frank Thomas at the plate,
|>1st base open, and they allow Hesketh to throw
|>something he can hit?
|>Who is in charge over there?
| Noted Red Sox killer Franco is on deck. You have to pitch to Thomas
| and hope for the best. It ain't Hobson's fault if Hesketh throws up a
| meatball.
"Red Sox killer" or not, Frank Thomas was the MVP lasted season. He is one of
the best clutch hitters in the game. Seems like a no-brainer to me.
Oh, wait a minute, I forgot, noted Red Sox apologist, MAC wrote that note -
never mind...
=Bob=
|
88.1095 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Apr 11 1994 17:18 | 1 |
| The Intentional Base on Balls is overrated.
|
88.1096 | Saturday's game was a hair-puller, even for early April... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Apr 11 1994 17:19 | 19 |
|
> Noted Red Sox killer Franco is on deck. You have to pitch to Thomas
> and hope for the best. It ain't Hobson's fault if Hesketh throws up a
> meatball.
And he didn't, really. Big Frank is just such a great hitter and so
strong that he was able to reach out and pick one off the outside corner
and still smoke it to the CF wall on the fly. The man is simply
awesome. Still, you can't rightly intentionally walk him in the third
inning with nobody out (with one out, I'd do it). The Butcher was
certainly caught between a rock and a hard place in that situation.
You want to get on Butch, try Saturday's game, where he had Tony Fossas
out there chucking up his schlock to a righthanded power hitter in a
winnable game, or pinch-hitting the overmatched Greg Blosser in the 9th
with two men on and only one out...
glenn
|
88.1097 | How long will Duquette go with this clown | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Tue Apr 12 1994 07:39 | 10 |
|
I have to agree with the last couple of replies. Can't pitch around
the Big Hurt with Franco there, thats asking for more trouble. Now
as to last nights game, its good the the Butcher back to his; try the
sac bunt oh you didn't get it down swing away mode, or maybe he knew
the Gaeti would throw a sure DP into right field, yea thats the ticket
the Butcher's clearvoient (sp).
Jerry
|
88.1098 | just a matter of time...??? | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Tue Apr 12 1994 10:15 | 4 |
| yeah...I'm pretty much sick of yelling at the tv myself...hobson just
doesn't know the fundamentals. how did he make it in pawtucket???
stig
|
88.1099 | | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Tue Apr 12 1994 10:26 | 12 |
| How Much Does Butch Suck?
Latest figures in on the Chainsaw's "How Much Does It Suck" Scale
for Butch Hobson:
6 Torr
hth,
'Saw
|
88.1100 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Apr 12 1994 11:34 | 5 |
| 'saw,
I am guessing that a "torr" is a torrez and 6 torr on the scale is
equal to 2/3 of a bd (in frustration)
billte
|
88.1101 | How Much Does it Suck? | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Tue Apr 12 1994 11:54 | 21 |
| > 'saw,
> I am guessing that a "torr" is a torrez and 6 torr on the scale is
> equal to 2/3 of a bd (in frustration)
Nope.
A Torr is a unit of measurement of a vacuum, named after the scientist
Torricelli. Now, I don't know a lot about it, and learned most of this
from a friend, but vacuums are measured in units of Torr, the more Torr
the stronger that vacuum.
That translates into the more Torr, the more it sucks.
Had the Chainsaw's "How Much Does it Suck" Scale been in existence in 1986,
Bill Buckner's stellar fielding play probably would have spiked out
at around 11 Torr.
Jon Casey of the Bruins is still this month's suckiest, at around 8.5 Torr.
|
88.1102 | inverse suck ratio | HBAHBA::HAAS | The karma ran over my dogma | Tue Apr 12 1994 11:58 | 6 |
| As I understand it, a Torr is a mm of pressure, as in 760 Torrs equals
a_atmosphere.
It looks like the smaller the number, the more it sucks.
TTom
|
88.1103 | | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Tue Apr 12 1994 12:02 | 14 |
|
>>> "Torricelli"
Please discuss Italian Food in the ::Cooking Notesfiles
Kev_for_MtM
;^)
|
88.1104 | | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Tue Apr 12 1994 12:22 | 16 |
| >
>As I understand it, a Torr is a mm of pressure, as in 760 Torrs equals
>a_atmosphere.
>
Hmmm, I thought that was something else. The only thing I could find in
my reference was as Atmosphere was a bunch of newtons....
>It looks like the smaller the number, the more it sucks.
Well, since it's MY scale, I'll just add the inverse as a given and say
that the higher the Torr the Morr it sucks....8^)
'saw
|
88.1105 | Of Cheers fame | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Apr 12 1994 12:22 | 1 |
| Wasn't that Carla's ex
|
88.1106 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Tue Apr 12 1994 13:52 | 4 |
| nah that was Tortelli.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1108 | what a start... | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Wed Apr 13 1994 07:34 | 4 |
| Sox must be up there in the stats with runs scored with detroit right
behind...
stig
|
88.1109 | You sure? | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Wed Apr 13 1994 09:38 | 8 |
|
Yabbut I thought Cooper missed the cycle (no triple).
I remain,
potentially (however slight) in error
Kev
|
88.1110 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Apr 13 1994 09:55 | 6 |
| Cooper was out trying to stretch it into an inside the parker.
He thought for a while that he was Silky Sullivan
But he gets credit for the triple he made in the first minute of the
action
|
88.1111 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Apr 13 1994 11:07 | 6 |
| � He thought for a while that he was Silky Sullivan
Who? Anyway, the thirdbase coach sent him. There were 2 down and the
Sox were up by at least 6 at the time. Cooper was slowing down going
into third (partly by choice, partly due to being gassed) when he saw
the coach giving him the windmill.
|
88.1112 | | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Wed Apr 13 1994 13:11 | 1 |
| Was that 1 TD and 5 FG's?
|
88.1113 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Whaddya want for nuttin'? | Wed Apr 13 1994 13:25 | 2 |
| Two pt. conversion...
|
88.1114 | | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Thu Apr 14 1994 09:34 | 9 |
| Who was on the mound last night in the 9th?
How much does that suck? Well, if you're holding a 1-0 lead into the
bottom of the 9th, and you give up a two run homer, then it's about 8 Torr
worth of suck.
'Saw
|
88.1115 | Why didn't Harris pitch the 9th? Russell sucks erie canal water | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Thu Apr 14 1994 09:39 | 10 |
|
How much does Russell suck? Not only does this guy fail to get
his job done, at least twice so far, but cries about Hobson taking
him out of a game. With Ryan is Sarasota for extended spring training
if you can get a draft pick for this putz pull the trigger. Are you
listening Dan?????
Jerry
|
88.1116 | I'm sick and tired... | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Thu Apr 14 1994 09:59 | 4 |
| or...why didn't he butchy boy leave sele in. again...this shows how
much butchy knows how to coach.
stig
|
88.1117 | | SALEM::DODA | Kurt Cobain: Plugged | Thu Apr 14 1994 10:22 | 4 |
| First he pulls Sele, then Harris. If Sele was tiring, I could
understand that, but why pull Harris?
daryll
|
88.1118 | | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Thu Apr 14 1994 10:39 | 4 |
| Does Russell have Reardon whiplash yet?
MikeL
|
88.1119 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Whaddya want for nuttin'? | Thu Apr 14 1994 10:41 | 2 |
| 2 Torr?
|
88.1120 | | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Thu Apr 14 1994 10:44 | 4 |
| Nope, last night's performance, combined between Russell and Butch maxes
out at about 8 Torr....
That's getting into Jon Casey range.....
|
88.1121 | | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Thu Apr 14 1994 10:57 | 1 |
| bob steamer range...
|
88.1122 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | 26/8=3.25 --- 8 tough loses | Thu Apr 14 1994 12:04 | 14 |
|
You can say whatever you want about Butch, I can't stand him
myself. Last night wasn't his fault though. Sele was tired, he took him
out and put Harris in. Greg Harris sucks wind when he tries to close a
game in the ninth, he chokes. Besides you win or lose with your closer on
the mound in a 1-0 game. So he takes Harris out, lets Fossas get the lefty
Joyner out, does his job, 1 batter out. Russel then comes in and Valentin
throws the ball into the dirt for an E-6. Nothing irks a closer more than
people making errors behind him. So instead of 2 outs there is only 1, BANG
homerun wins the game. If it wasn't for Valentin, the WINNING run would
not have been at the plate. Granted if he still throws the gopher ball, the
game is tied up and we go into extra innings.
Ron
|
88.1123 | | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Thu Apr 14 1994 12:10 | 3 |
| E-6?
We just moved up to 9 Torr.....
|
88.1124 | | CAPNET::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Product Management | Thu Apr 14 1994 12:55 | 3 |
| Anyone else getting bored with this Torr crap?
Mark.
|
88.1125 | yes, a long time ago | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu Apr 14 1994 13:07 | 1 |
| > Anyone else getting bored with this Torr crap?
|
88.1126 | | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Thu Apr 14 1994 13:09 | 4 |
| re the last two:
bleaume
|
88.1127 | I don't get it | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu Apr 14 1994 13:15 | 1 |
| Is that French for "bloom"?
|
88.1129 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu Apr 14 1994 13:43 | 2 |
|
Exactly like that SNARF crap, Karen.
|
88.1130 | It's over the wall | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Thu Apr 14 1994 13:53 | 7 |
|
Man the way notes are getting knocked out of the park today reminds
alot of when Roger is on the mound........
hahaha
;^)
|
88.1131 | | CAMONE::WAY | Smells like dead teen spirit | Thu Apr 14 1994 14:03 | 14 |
| Mike,
Actually, it's a little gag a couple of us have going with our name tags
on non-important Guard drill nights.
If you take the word and seperate it into two words, the second word being
"me", it takes on a meaning somewhat akin to Mark's famous "Do Me" and
somewhat related, in a nebulous sort of way, to Torr and how much does that
suck.....
All 8^) of course.....
'Saw
|
88.1132 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu Apr 14 1994 14:44 | 6 |
| re: .1130
Just goes to show you that when Mac leaves the fun returns.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1133 | just call me Quickdraw | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu Apr 14 1994 15:02 | 1 |
| some folks are just jealous cuz they cain't snarf properly.
|
88.1134 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Muhammed, Muhammed Ali... | Thu Apr 14 1994 15:05 | 2 |
| That's if they wanted to...
|
88.1135 | they want it *BAD* | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu Apr 14 1994 15:06 | 1 |
|
|
88.1136 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | TFO has been TFSO'd | Fri Apr 15 1994 13:48 | 4 |
| <<< Note 88.1133 by FRETZ::HEISER "no D in Phoenix" >>>
> -< just call me Quickdraw >-
I thought it was only your wife who called you that.
|
88.1137 | | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Fri Apr 15 1994 14:05 | 2 |
| but she's just jealous that I can draw better cartoon characters than
her.
|
88.1138 | you sure that is what you meant? | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Fri Apr 15 1994 14:25 | 6 |
| MikeH I would take a look at .1137 and punctuate it or change it. It
has one meaning that I am sure you intended and another one that well I
suspect your wife might be less than pleased with.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1139 | get yer filthy mind outta the gutter | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Fri Apr 15 1994 14:27 | 1 |
|
|
88.1140 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Fri Apr 15 1994 14:29 | 4 |
| huh?? nothing filthy in my remark.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1141 | PaleSox blow out BoSox | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Mon Apr 18 1994 17:16 | 1 |
|
|
88.1142 | | PTOVAX::JACOB | It's noon SOMEWHERE in the world!! | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:51 | 4 |
| What a display of offense on Pats day by the RedSux, eh????
JaKe
|
88.1143 | | MKFSA::LONG | That's my story and I'm stickin' to it! | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:56 | 7 |
| They saved it up for yesterday's game. One of the Sox parked one
right smack dab into the seat I was sitting in Monday. Thank
goodness it didn't happen Monday! I don't think I was in any shape
to catch it, much less get out of the way.
billl
|
88.1144 | | PTOVAX::JACOB | It's noon SOMEWHERE in the world!! | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:57 | 5 |
| Yeah, but think of the stories you could have told about how you lost
alla yer front teef!!!
JaKe
|
88.1145 | | CAMONE::WAY | Snake and Nape | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:57 | 5 |
| > Yeah, but think of the stories you could have told about how you lost
> alla yer front teef!!!
Or gained an extra big testicle....
|
88.1146 | | MKFSA::LONG | That's my story and I'm stickin' to it! | Wed Apr 20 1994 17:00 | 7 |
| By the way, did else anyone notice that MikeL only had half a seat?
I didn't know you could buy them that way.
Oh yeah, MikeL, the sun did come up Monday in case you missed it.
billl
|
88.1147 | just like John Kruk | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Wed Apr 20 1994 19:00 | 1 |
| >Or gained an extra big testicle....
|
88.1148 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Thanks Zeke... | Wed Apr 20 1994 20:39 | 2 |
| You could have seen them win if it didn't rain Saturday...
|
88.1149 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Thu Apr 21 1994 09:58 | 4 |
|
Hip Hip Horray, the real Roger is back...............
;^(
|
88.1150 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Wed May 04 1994 11:31 | 2 |
| Boy, that guy from the Mariners last night looked like he wanted
to give Quantrill a hummer instead of fight him......
|
88.1151 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed May 04 1994 11:36 | 2 |
| What is baseball coming to when a guy who isn't even hit with a pitch
throws a tantrum (along with his helmet) and charges the mound?
|
88.1152 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Wed May 04 1994 11:43 | 4 |
| basketball and hockey wannabe??
The Crazy Met
|
88.1153 | | MKFSA::LONG | Great view from the cheap seats! | Wed May 04 1994 11:58 | 16 |
| I was wondering how long it was going to take before last night's
fiasco got mentioned in here. I was watching the Broons, and
decided to do some channel surfing. I tuned in just as the new
pitcher (forget his name) started working after the "noogie contest"
had ended. Did anyone get to see the whole thing?
On the 11:00 news they only showed the Mariner and Quantell jawing
at each other. Then you see the Mariner throw his batting helmet
at Quantrell as he raced towards him. That's almost as dumb as a
football player removing his helmet when a brawl breaks out.
As it turned out Quantrell must have given him a harder "noogie"
since he seemed to be the only one injured.
billl
|
88.1154 | | MKFSA::LONG | Great view from the cheap seats! | Wed May 04 1994 11:59 | 8 |
| Speaking of injuries, has anyone heard anything yet on the severity
of Viola's problem?
I thought I heard he was having an MRI done this morning.
billl
|
88.1155 | Uh, gee, who's pitching tonight... could it be Danny Darwin? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 04 1994 12:24 | 27 |
|
Quantrill is a Canadian and an ex-hokey player, and was quoted as saying
something to the effect that he wouldn't mind standing toe-to-toe and
going at it (with Eric Anthony? I don't know if he'd like that over a
prolonged period) but sure as hell doesn't like being under the pile
getting stepped on.
The final straw that set Anthony off was Quantrill saying "ah, bleep
you" over his shoulder as Anthony trotted to first. That's real weak
on Anthony's part. Talk about sensitive. I think he should get the
five games just for sheer stupidity.
With all of this kind of thing going down all over baseball, can anyone
remember the last time a Red Sox player initiated a fight? They've
been in a couple over the past few years, but always on the receiving
end. I admire the way that tough players like Mo Vaughn and the veteran
pitchers have adhered to the proper code of conduct. Vaughn took another
obvious first-base-open intentional bean ball in last Saturday's game
against the Angels, glared at the pitcher and trotted to first. Next
inning, Chili Davis leads off, Clemens (who had great control all game
long) goes up 1-and-2 and then plunks Davis in the back. Very few
pitchers have the guts or the ability to put a leadoff man on like that
but Clemens' intent was unmistakable. To his credit, Davis was a pro
about it and might have had a word with his teammate afterwards...
glenn
|
88.1156 | When it was a game and real MEN played it... | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Wed May 04 1994 12:32 | 12 |
| Real men will take the hit for the club, and go to first base, and not
show what sissies they are by charging the mound.
Personally, I think it takes more guts to stand in there, take the
hbp, and then walk down to first. By doing that you're saying, in effect,
"Hey meat, I took your best shot and you didn't get to me."
That guy looked stupid charging the mound last night....
'Saw
|
88.1157 | Whats wrong with the high and tight message pitch??? | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Wed May 04 1994 12:34 | 6 |
|
re .-1 > Hey meat, I took your best shot and you didn't get to me."
Can you say Don Baylor?
j/
|
88.1158 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | 26/8=3.25 --- 8 tough loses | Wed May 04 1994 12:49 | 6 |
|
No word yet on Frankie V's elbow. From the looks of it last night
it doesn't look. I think the tendon in his elbow went POP, lets hope
not.
Ron
|
88.1159 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Wed May 04 1994 12:50 | 3 |
| > Can you say Don Baylor?
A Man's Man, with a big butt to boot!
|
88.1160 | shhhh! be vewy qwiet! | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Wed May 04 1994 19:36 | 5 |
| psssst! no look now, but somebody has the best record in baseball!
More good news: the last time I saw them in person, they went to the
World Series that year. I'll grace them with my presence again soon.
Mike
|
88.1161 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Wed May 04 1994 20:58 | 6 |
| sssshhhhh...
It's only May.
I'd love to see the Red Sox win the pennant, but it's much too early for Pennant
Fever...
|
88.1162 | | PTOVAX::JACOB | We like our beer flat as can be.. | Wed May 04 1994 22:13 | 4 |
| HALisms coming from the Red Sux fans!!!!
JaKe
|
88.1163 | Don't look now! | BALL4::KURAS | Buy me some peanuts & Crackerjacks | Thu May 05 1994 08:49 | 14 |
| It's only May, & the injuries begin to creep up on the Sox. With the
Sox carrying 12 pitchers, it is likely that no pitcher will be called
up from Pawtucket to replace the injured Frank Viola. However,
shortstop John Valentin is hurting, & may require 'scope surgery.
So, the line of thinking is to call up a shortstop to replace Viola.
Then, if Valentin really does go down for 6 weeks, call up another
pitcher.
Shortstops Carlos Rodriguez (.380) & Mario Diaz (somewhere in the
.300's as well) have the inside track on the call to Boston. Gar
Finnvold (5-1) may get the call later. Diaz has a Todd Frohwirth type
clause in his contract. If not called up to Boston by June 1, he is
free to cut his own deal with any team.
|
88.1164 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 09:45 | 6 |
| It's still to early to call.
And even if the Red Sox won the Series this year, it would be tainted
by this new girly-mon playoff system they instituted.
'SAw
|
88.1165 | Real fun begins this weekend... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 05 1994 10:01 | 17 |
|
> And even if the Red Sox won the Series this year, it would be tainted
> by this new girly-mon playoff system they instituted.
Not if they were to finish a legitimate first in the mainly, Denis
Leary-macho AL East, as the new playoff system would only make it
tougher to win it all under those circumstances. For right now,
though, I don't think there's any reason not to look at that wild
card spot as a realistic possibility (not probability, just
possibility), which is sort of a backdoor escape valve that takes
the edge off any late-season tension.
Don't wound yourself catapulting onto yet another bandwagon,
Heiser... ;-)
glenn
|
88.1166 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 10:07 | 17 |
| > Not if they were to finish a legitimate first in the mainly, Denis
> Leary-macho AL East, as the new playoff system would only make it
I'll bet they have un-filtered Camels in the locker room huh. Ol'
Mo Vaughn sucking on an un-filtered Camel while he gnaws on a leg bone
from a cow.
Frankie Viola would be duct-taping his elbow back together, saying
no pain, no f___ing pain.
Butch Hobson would have a tumor someplace, for like the fifth time.
How cool is all of that.... I love these Sox!
'SAw
|
88.1167 | Lets get ready to RUMBLE!!!!!!!!!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu May 05 1994 10:13 | 10 |
|
As it was mentioned earlier, the FUN begins this weekend. A little
Tea Party down in NEW YORK. DA BRONX. We'll soon see the Sox aren't
playing the weak West Coast anymore!
Chappy
|
88.1168 | Darwin's too damn old to need 'em, anyway... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 05 1994 10:23 | 15 |
|
Hey, Chap, nice how-not-to baserunning clinic Donnie Baseball put on in
the 13th last night. Woulda made Mike Greenwell proud. Ol' friend
Jeff Reardon finally gave one away in a barrage of hits, too...
Speaking of tough, Danny Darwin took a glancing shot to the tes-tick-als
last night without tearing up in either eye, retrieved the ball and
threw the runner out. He walked it off and lived to joke about it
afterwards, but it was *very* disappointing that he didn't stay
in the game. It was about time to come out anyway, but I think he
should have spit in Pain's eye and stayed in for one more batter just
to make the point.
glenn
|
88.1169 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 10:40 | 18 |
| > Speaking of tough, Danny Darwin took a glancing shot to the tes-tick-als
> last night without tearing up in either eye, retrieved the ball and
> threw the runner out. He walked it off and lived to joke about it
> afterwards, but it was *very* disappointing that he didn't stay
> in the game. It was about time to come out anyway, but I think he
> should have spit in Pain's eye and stayed in for one more batter just
> to make the point.
I'll bet they're big and brass...or maybe steel.
And I'll bet when he got into the clubhouse he had an un-filtered Camel
and at some bacon. He probably put duct tape on his testicals too.
He probably said "F___ you Pain, and the baseball you rode in on!"
Cool....
|
88.1170 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Thu May 05 1994 10:40 | 10 |
|
|And even if the Red Sox won the Series this year, it would be tainted
|by this new girly-mon playoff system they instituted.
Bite your tongue! I've been waiting for the Red Sox to win a champeenship for
36 year, and that's nothing compared to some fans. If the Red Sox win, under
any circumstances, it will be a cause for one of the most joyous celebrations
in modern history.
=Bob=
|
88.1171 | Pony Express rides again | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 05 1994 10:51 | 3 |
| � psssst! no look now, but somebody has the best record in baseball!
Pssst, they've had the best record in baseball for about a week now.
|
88.1172 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 11:16 | 11 |
| re Bob and Glenn,
Yes, I know. I guess I'm just a purist at heart and think this new
playoff format stinks.
At least the powers in charge didn't commit the more odious crime of
allowing inter-league play. Once they do that, the universe will go
down the sh___er.....
'Saw
|
88.1173 | hahahahaha | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Thu May 05 1994 11:17 | 16 |
|
Yabbut once again we're been treated to the Carnac_Not of bazeball
predictions by JoeK!!!
Hobson was quoted as sayin yesterday that he would bring up from
Pawtuckett some guy who is presently 5-0.
soitenly hoppy to halp!
;^)
I remain,
knowing Carnac_Not's predictions are as good as his record as a Manager
Kev
|
88.1174 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu May 05 1994 11:19 | 10 |
|
YABBUT GLEN,
Did ya also notice DONNIE BASEBALLs 4 hits last night too?
Chappy
|
88.1175 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 11:20 | 10 |
| Yeah, so?
He's been hanging around with Wade for too long, and the Selfish Disease
has rubbed off on him like Athlete's Foot migrates in th showers.
He's juts padding his personal statistics while his team is losing.....
hth,
'Saw
|
88.1176 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Holtz, ACC Crisp, TC* | Thu May 05 1994 11:43 | 7 |
| > We'll soon see the Sox aren't playing the weak West Coast anymore!
And who have the Yankmes, who are now 3 1/2 games behind the Sox been
playing? They've had essentially the same schedule as the Red Sox,
they just weren't as good against it.
brews
|
88.1177 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu May 05 1994 12:19 | 9 |
|
Except 2 of our losses are against Texas which I don't believe the
Sox played yet. We'll see how many of ya jump off the bandwagon when
they start LOSING to the AL East!
Chap
|
88.1178 | All is forgotten when the AL East schedule starts... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 05 1994 12:39 | 13 |
|
> Except 2 of our losses are against Texas which I don't believe the
> Sox played yet.
Texas blows so far, but not only that, you played them twice and beat
them both times. Boston has played Chicago six times and KC three to
NY's three with Chicago (the difference being picked up with the two
with Texas and three more with Detroit). The Red Sox have played the
tougher schedule so far. But you're right, that small difference
doesn't mean a thing yet...
glenn
|
88.1179 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu May 05 1994 12:40 | 5 |
| so the "don't say anything good about the Red Sox" sandbaggin
is starting in May. hmmm.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1180 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 05 1994 12:46 | 4 |
| Nice try, TCM. You can't sandbag on a team that was picked by most
experts to finish no better than 4th in their division.
HTH
|
88.1181 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu May 05 1994 12:47 | 5 |
| huh??? where the Red Sox were predicted to finish has nothing to
do with sandbaggin, that depends on where they are now.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1182 | I think they can win wildcard, TCM looking at da ring no doubt | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 05 1994 12:48 | 9 |
|
> so the "don't say anything good about the Red Sox" sandbaggin
> is starting in May. hmmm.
Care to share your own personal prediction on the Sox with us, or are
you going to play it on both sides of the fence as usual?
glenn
|
88.1183 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu May 05 1994 12:49 | 7 |
| who me, I don't really care where the Red SOx finish. but sure
you want a prediction?
Red Sox finish in 3rd behind Toronto and Baltimore.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1184 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 05 1994 12:49 | 2 |
| Sorry, TCM, but someone who can't recognize sandbagging in himself is
not qualified to speak on what does and doesn't constitute sandbagging.
|
88.1185 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Holtz, ACC Crisp, TC* | Thu May 05 1994 12:56 | 12 |
| > Except 2 of our losses are against Texas which I don't believe
> the Sox played yet. We'll see how many of ya jump off the bandwagon
> when they start LOSING to the AL East!
Actually, 2 of your 3 losses on this last road trip enabled two of
the worst teams in baseball to end l-o-n-g losing streaks. Steaks the
Sox either helped to start or extend.
I see Boggs already has 5 errors this year. Yikes!
brews
|
88.1186 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Thu May 05 1994 13:01 | 7 |
|
if you ask me this Soxs' team has it all...
good pitching, good hitting no crybaby superstars and a shabby enough
defense to error their way to another heartbreak in the Series....
;^)
|
88.1187 | hope this helps | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu May 05 1994 13:05 | 4 |
| > Don't wound yourself catapulting onto yet another bandwagon,
> Heiser... ;-)
glenn, unlike you, I was born on this bandwagon.
|
88.1188 | The Bandwagon will be empty by July!!!!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu May 05 1994 13:12 | 11 |
|
Brews Please don't say anything bad about Boggs you know he's my
hero!
I'm not gloating about the Yankees record or where they stand, but
I love you Sox fans all chippy and cheerful in the 1st week of May.
Chap
|
88.1189 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 05 1994 13:14 | 3 |
| � -< The Bandwagon will be empty by July!!!!!!!! >-
Not as empty as Yankee Stadium.
|
88.1190 | | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu May 05 1994 13:16 | 5 |
| > Pssst, they've had the best record in baseball for about a week now.
actually Mac, I wanted to wait and see if they could maintain it for
any length of time. Glad you didn't disappoint in figuring that out
all by yourself.
|
88.1191 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu May 05 1994 13:28 | 8 |
| not admittng to anything
but to .1184
what about the old cliche "it takes one to know one"
The Crazy Met
|
88.1192 | NICE COMEBACK! | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu May 05 1994 13:30 | 1 |
| >what about the old cliche "it takes one to know one"
|
88.1193 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 05 1994 13:35 | 1 |
| TCM, please show me where I've been sandbagging.
|
88.1194 | Say "NO" to Farley | BALL4::KURAS | another chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Thu May 05 1994 13:36 | 17 |
| < Yabbut once again we're been treated to the Carnac_Not of bazeball
< predictions by JoeK!!!
Careful, Kev! You still need some little league uniforms from me for
your 2 "mud piles", as you put it, recently added to your roster. And
you did say you had some concerns & preferences with regards to size,
right?
< Hobson was quoted as sayin yesterday that he would bring up from
< Pawtuckett some guy who is presently 5-0.
So who says this is "Hobson's Choice?" Ever hear of a man named Dan
Duquette?
< knowing Carnac_Not's predictions are as good as his record as a Manager
Ya can't make chicken salad out of chicken s ...never mind.
|
88.1195 | | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu May 05 1994 13:36 | 1 |
| Hey 'Saw, how'd you like Greenwell's homer last night?
|
88.1196 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Holtz, ACC Crisp, TC* | Thu May 05 1994 13:37 | 19 |
| > I'm not gloating about the Yankees record or where they stand,
Because you are in no position to gloat. Actually, in the history of
this notesfile, there has last year was probably about the only year
Yankee fans have had to gloat in here.
> but I love you Sox fans all chippy and cheerful in the 1st week of May.
Except for Heiser, no one else is really gloating, and you've
spoted off more than he has in your diatribe. Yes, the fans are
cheerful, as they should be, but I don't see anyone predicting a
pennant or even a WC slot. Everyone (except you, apparently) know
enough to wait.
brews
|
88.1197 | I never gloat | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu May 05 1994 13:40 | 3 |
| Brews, I wasn't really gloating. I'm just as surprised as everyone
else and found it a little curious (but not surprising) that nobody was
talking about it.
|
88.1198 | why can't we get players like that | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu May 05 1994 13:41 | 1 |
| Did ya see Ellis Burks won Player of the Week?
|
88.1199 | that was month | BSS::MENDEZ | | Thu May 05 1994 13:47 | 5 |
| Re.1198
Ellis Burks was player of the month not week. And he is really hitting
the ball well. If only the Rockies could get some relief pitching.
|
88.1200 | snarf | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu May 05 1994 13:51 | 1 |
|
|
88.1201 | | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu May 05 1994 13:51 | 1 |
| Do you think the altitude is helping out?
|
88.1202 | I nominate MikeH for the Crow Note duties, in advance | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 05 1994 14:04 | 20 |
|
>> Don't wound yourself catapulting onto yet another bandwagon,
>> Heiser... ;-)
>
> glenn, unlike you, I was born on this bandwagon.
I know all that, Mike, and was just giving you a hard time, but I also
know that there's no more surefire method to having us all slurping
down huge piles of crow than to have someone (who should know better)
come in here-- right before a 3-game series at Yankee Stadium-- and
innocently whisper "don't look now, but the Red Sox have the best
record in baseball". None whatsoever. Most of us know that that level
of achievement can not and will not continue, and that the Sox are
playing over their heads (in spite of TCM's illogic where it's
sandbagging to state realistic expectations that precisely match his
own), but we'd still like to enjoy the blissful serenity of it all for
as long as possible, thank you.
glenn
|
88.1203 | Another impossible dream season but no WS Ring????? | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu May 05 1994 14:10 | 4 |
|
Sorry Brews, I keep forgetting, you never gloat, you are never
wrong, your my idol.
|
88.1204 | oop's | HBAHBA::HAAS | Maybe too much Goody's Powder | Thu May 05 1994 14:16 | 7 |
| > Sorry Brews, I keep forgetting, you never gloat, you are never
> wrong, your my idol.
^^^^
L'absence de l'apostrophe, n'ext pa?
TTom
|
88.1205 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Holtz, ACC Crisp, TC* | Thu May 05 1994 14:16 | 7 |
| >Sorry Brews, I keep forgetting, you never gloat, you are never
>wrong, your my idol.
I accept your capitulation. It is indeed tough standards to live up
to, but I do my darndest.
brews
|
88.1206 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 14:30 | 6 |
| Re Greenwell's Homer:
Okay, so he hit a homer and lowered himself on the Chainsaw's
"How Much Does it Suck" Scale a little bit. He's still
atrocious in the field....8^)
|
88.1207 | Little item to make saw's day | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu May 05 1994 14:32 | 1 |
| Greenwell is hitting 4 something when swinging at the first pitch
|
88.1208 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu May 05 1994 14:40 | 9 |
| re: .1193
Mac, you really are way off today. You simply stated that I could not
say someone was sandbagging because, you claim, I am sandbagging. My
reply was to that and not a statement about you at all. You are
really getting paranoid.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1209 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 14:41 | 6 |
| > -< Little item to make saw's day >-
>
> Greenwell is hitting 4 something when swinging at the first pitch
Gee, I'd settle for high 2-something if the guy could play left field....
|
88.1210 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 05 1994 14:54 | 5 |
| Can someone translate .1208 for me?
'Saw, how many runs has Greenwell cost the Red Sox by playing LF? LF
is probably the least critical position in baseball in terms of
defense.
|
88.1211 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu May 05 1994 14:56 | 3 |
|
Um, TCM? You don't really have the right to call anyone paranoid
either.
|
88.1212 | makes me worry | HBAHBA::HAAS | Maybe too much Goody's Powder | Thu May 05 1994 14:57 | 3 |
| Hey, how come no one is calling me paranoid?
TTom
|
88.1213 | Greenwell is far worse then Casey.... | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 15:01 | 19 |
| > 'Saw, how many runs has Greenwell cost the Red Sox by playing LF? LF
> is probably the least critical position in baseball in terms of
> defense.
>
Greenwell sucks in LF. I think that RF is probably the least critical
but that's besides the point.
Greenwell sucks period, and isn't worth the money that they pay him.
And I'll tell you this right now. Even if it was Game 7 of the World
Series, bottom of then ninth inning, Sox down by 1 run, two men on, two
men out, and Greenwell hit a home run to win it all, he'd still be on
the Chainsaw's "How Much Does That Suck" Scale.....
'Saw
|
88.1214 | | MKFSA::LONG | Great view from the cheap seats! | Thu May 05 1994 15:04 | 1 |
| Help me! The paranoids are after me!
|
88.1215 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 15:08 | 6 |
| > Help me! The paranoids are after me!
That could be a song of the week sometime, that song
Somebody's Watching Me...
|
88.1216 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Home of the driveby noter... | Thu May 05 1994 15:10 | 7 |
| When I'm in the shower, I'm afraid to wash my hair
'cuz when I open my eyes I might someone standing there...
People say I'm crazy, well just a touch,
but maybe showers reminder me of Psycho too much... that's why...
-Berry Gordy Jr...
|
88.1217 | | KALVIN::MORGAN | | Thu May 05 1994 15:27 | 6 |
| Geez Saw, I guess someone that busts his ass every game and hits the
ball hard more often than not, and is at worst, an average left fielder
is a real stiff, huh? Man, you should learn to appreciate a good player
while you have the chance and not compare him to HOFers.
Steve
|
88.1218 | best laugh of the day | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Thu May 05 1994 15:30 | 11 |
|
> Geez Saw, I guess someone that busts his ass every game and hits the
> ball hard more often than not, and is at worst, an average left fielder
> is a real stiff, huh? Man, you should learn to appreciate a good player
> while you have the chance and not compare him to HOFers. ^^^^^^^^^^
hahahahahaha
mike
|
88.1219 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 15:33 | 23 |
| > Geez Saw, I guess someone that busts his ass every game and hits the
> ball hard more often than not, and is at worst, an average left fielder
> is a real stiff, huh? Man, you should learn to appreciate a good player
> while you have the chance and not compare him to HOFers.
When you need him to make the clutch play in left he always falls short.
He blows plays that an average left fielder could make easily. He's
always running into the wall. This guy makes Rice look like the best
LF ever.
I've appreciated plenty of good players over the years. Greenwell couldn't
carry most of their jocks, and then he's got the unmitigated gall to
ask for 5 mill a year. He's the one who should be appreciative. He
should appreciate the fact that he's got a job....
If he didn't have such a high opinion of himself, I'll admit that would
make him a little more palatable to me....
'Saw
|
88.1220 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 05 1994 15:39 | 15 |
| �I've appreciated plenty of good players over the years. Greenwell couldn't
�carry most of their jocks, and then he's got the unmitigated gall to
�ask for 5 mill a year. He's the one who should be appreciative. He
�should appreciate the fact that he's got a job....
�
�If he didn't have such a high opinion of himself, I'll admit that would
�make him a little more palatable to me....
When you look at the contracts signed by some of the free agents
recently who put up numbers similar to Greenwell it is easy to
understand why he asked for the contract he did.
Despite asking for that amount, Greenwell did not get it and has not
whined about not getting it. He made it quite clear that he wanted to
stay in Boston and was willing to take a pay cut to do so.
|
88.1221 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 15:42 | 17 |
| > When you look at the contracts signed by some of the free agents
> recently who put up numbers similar to Greenwell it is easy to
> understand why he asked for the contract he did.
Baseball is more than just numbers. Fielding stats are hard presed to
show just how costly some errors can be.
> Despite asking for that amount, Greenwell did not get it and has not
> whined about not getting it. He made it quite clear that he wanted to
> stay in Boston and was willing to take a pay cut to do so.
Well, that might make him a good mayoral candidate but doesn't do much
in terms of covering left....
'Saw
|
88.1222 | uduh | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu May 05 1994 15:44 | 10 |
|
Mookie Wilson > Mike Greenwell
sorry ttom cant always member puntiationed....
Brews what does capituation mean? I'm just a small town boy not youse
to your big Bastan words.
|
88.1223 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu May 05 1994 15:44 | 12 |
|
When you flat out state that you won't even give the guy his due
if he was to hit the homer that ended the Sox' 76 year World Series
drought then it's damned obvious that you aren't just judging the
guy by his play - it's personal. Well *personally*, I've never seen
Greenwell dog it. Not for one game. Not for one at bat. Not for one
pitch. He ain't the most talented player that ever laced up a pair
of spikes but he doesn't just show up either and he produces. He
ain't Yaz or Rice or Williams there's only one of each of those.
But he gets the most out of what he's got, don't blame him if that
ain't much blame God.
|
88.1224 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 15:48 | 30 |
| > When you flat out state that you won't even give the guy his due
> if he was to hit the homer that ended the Sox' 76 year World Series
> drought then it's damned obvious that you aren't just judging the
> guy by his play - it's personal. Well *personally*, I've never seen
> Greenwell dog it. Not for one game. Not for one at bat. Not for one
> pitch. He ain't the most talented player that ever laced up a pair
> of spikes but he doesn't just show up either and he produces. He
> ain't Yaz or Rice or Williams there's only one of each of those.
> But he gets the most out of what he's got, don't blame him if that
> ain't much blame God.
1. One home run to win a world series game does not end the
drought, any more than one strikeout (a more likely
scenario with Greenwell) would keep it going.
2. I didn't say I wouldn't give him his due, I just said
it wouldn't be enough to overcome a lifetime of sucking.
3. I don't like him -- never denied that.
4. Okay -- God, you've just pulled a 3.5 Torr for not
giving Greenwell more talent...
I think that just about touches all the bases,
'/saw
|
88.1225 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Thu May 05 1994 15:50 | 10 |
|
Tommy, I think you're being a bit too harsh on God. Afterall there are
plenty of examples of players who have improved their mediocre skills
at one particular facet of the game to where they are above average.
I know Magic was a horrible outside shooter but improved drastically
over his career. Also there used to be a third baseman for the soxs
who was horrible in the field and improved enough to be considered
for a golden glove. Funny how his name escapes me.....
;^)
|
88.1226 | couldn't shoot in college | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu May 05 1994 15:55 | 1 |
| Yeah and look at the 3-pt king - Dan Majerle.
|
88.1227 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Thu May 05 1994 16:01 | 17 |
|
>> 1. One home run to win a world series game does not end the
>> drought, any more than one strikeout (a more likely
>> scenario with Greenwell) would keep it going.
Not just *a* world series game, Bubba. You said "Game seven".
>> 2. I didn't say I wouldn't give him his due, I just said
>> it wouldn't be enough to overcome a lifetime of sucking.
No true Red Sox fan would think that anyone would suck if
they hit the homer that ended the drought. Quite the contrary.
This really calls in to question your credentials as a Sox fan.
Being from Connecticut they're already suspect.
|
88.1228 | 6 HR, 20 RBIs through 1/6-season...the man can still hit | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 05 1994 16:11 | 22 |
|
> Mookie Wilson > Mike Greenwell
And Luis Polonia's better than the both of them, right, Chappy?
Please... Mookie was one of those "fun" types who went over big
for a while in New York trend fashion, but he was also one of the
great trick-or-treat ballplayers of his time. Leave it to Mets'
management to decide that Mookie's karma was more valuable than
Len Dykstra's ability...
'Saw, you got to keep up. It's more fashionable this week to bash
Greenwell for his baserunning deficiencies than for his fielding
(which subsided a bit after Greenwell nailed a couple runners in key
situations). Neither one of those weaknesses amounts to much over a
full season when compared with his (normally) productive bat, and as
long as he continues to silence all those disguised Cowboy fans (who
come to the park for no other reason than to ride him) with clutch 2-
and 3-run homers and another .330+ average with men in scoring
position, I'm happy. That wins ballgames...
glenn
|
88.1229 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 16:28 | 43 |
| > Not just *a* world series game, Bubba. You said "Game seven".
Right, Game 7. But it took a certain combination of plays, and errors
and hits and walks and strikeouts to get to that point.
There was a Game 7 in 1986, but everyone remembers Game 6, much as it
pains me to bring it up....
| >> 2. I didn't say I wouldn't give him his due, I just said
| >> it wouldn't be enough to overcome a lifetime of sucking.
|
| No true Red Sox fan would think that anyone would suck if
| they hit the homer that ended the drought. Quite the contrary.
| This really calls in to question your credentials as a Sox fan.
| Being from Connecticut they're already suspect.
Nyah, Shaddup.
It means nothing of the sort. Every true Sox fan would have loved for
Ted Williams to have cracked one out to win a series, or for
Carl Yaztremskil to have done the same thing. We wished that Carlton's
phenomenal homer was in Game 7 instead of Game 6 (how cool would that
have been?)
If Greenie hit a homer to win a game 7 I'd just just as high as every
other Sox fan, and be just as happy, and still think that over his
career he sucked, and then I'd get down on my knees and thank God
in Heaven above, that for one bright and shining moment, one crucial
second in all the time that's ever been or ever will be, I'd that the
Lord that Mike Greenwell didn't suck right then....
And btw, despite having a sadistic Nazi Corrupted Crook for a Governor,
Connecticut is quite a nice state.....
'Saw
|
88.1230 | fond memories | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu May 05 1994 16:33 | 7 |
| > but everyone remembers Game 6, much as it
> pains me to bring it up....
no pain whatsoever.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1231 | Greenwell Sucks!!!!!!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu May 05 1994 16:43 | 8 |
|
Don't worry Saw there won't be NO game 7's in the Red Sox near
future. Mookie was just great at hitting slow rollers toward first.
Chappy
|
88.1232 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 16:52 | 11 |
| >
> Don't worry Saw there won't be NO game 7's in the Red Sox near
> future. Mookie was just great at hitting slow rollers toward first.
>
Red Sox will have a game 7 in a World Series long before the Yank-mes
ever get back there, Chappy. You can count on it....8^)
'Saw
|
88.1233 | Maybe if they brought a babe'GOAT to Fenway!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu May 05 1994 16:56 | 8 |
|
Oh How I wish we were allowed to GAMBLE in here. I'd own
everything you gots sawmain.
Chap
|
88.1234 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Thu May 05 1994 17:05 | 21 |
| >
> Oh How I wish we were allowed to GAMBLE in here. I'd own
> everything you gots sawmain.
>
I don't gamble.
The few times I have, I've found it far too enjoyable, and was actually
quite afraid it would get to be a habit, and then I'd have to be
in something like Gambler's Anonymous.
So, I play the Lotto every once in a great while, I might play a couple
of rolls of quarters in the slots at Foxwoods, and even now and again
have the odd poker evening with my buddies. But other than that I
avoid gambling like the plague....
No 12-Step Programs for the Sawmain....
'Saw
|
88.1235 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Holtz, ACC Crisp, TC* | Thu May 05 1994 17:05 | 11 |
| > Brews what does capituation mean? I'm just a small town boy not youse
> to your big Bastan words.
So, you can't spell, can't punctuate, and have a difficult time with
reading comprehension. Typical Yankee fan. I should tell you to look
it up in the dictionary. Had your mother told you that, instead of
capitulating to your request to do your reading for you, you'd know
what it means. But I'll be nice. It means to acquiesce. I too am a
small town boy, and learned the words for myself.
brews
|
88.1236 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu May 05 1994 17:10 | 11 |
|
What does acquiesce mean? I mean I'll agree,I'll comply, tell me will
ya.
BTW not everyone had a Mother for there childhood so you shouldn't
jump to conclusions!
Chap
|
88.1237 | Yo, Kev! | BALL4::KURAS | another chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Fri May 06 1994 08:34 | 10 |
| < Yabbut once again we're been treated to the Carnac_Not of bazeball
< predictions by JoeK!!!
< Hobson was quoted as sayin yesterday that he would bring up from
< Pawtuckett some guy who is presently 5-0.
Yabbut, Yo Kev! I didn't catch the news or see the paper yet. So just
who did the Sox call up to replace Frankie V??
/joe
|
88.1238 | Greenwell | KALVIN::MORGAN | | Fri May 06 1994 09:28 | 16 |
| So Saw does that mean that Joe Carter sucks? And Wade Boggs sucks?
And Dwight Evans sucked? These guys all asked for more money that the
Sox were willing to give right? Using your logic they all suck!
It's obvious you don't like Greenwell for personal reasons. You don't
seem to understand that left field IS the one position you can hide a
poor fielding outfielder, especially at Fenway. This isn't Little
League where you usually take the stankiest kid and stick him in right.
You want your best bats in the lineup and without Greenwell's, the Sox
would probably be in the middle of the pack right now.
To me, it's a pleasure to watch a professional ball player that plays
hard at all times while being very productive as well.
Steve
|
88.1239 | What are we up to now, 2 porch HRs and a GWRBI? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 06 1994 10:10 | 7 |
|
I'm just thinking that the longer we keep this Greenwell thing going,
and the higher he rises on the Sawmain's personal Torr scale, the
better the weekend he'll have against the Yanks. Thanks, 'Saw!
glenn
|
88.1240 | Mario (?) Diaz (ss, .341 in Pawtucket) up to fill Viola's spot, Zupcic waived | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Fri May 06 1994 10:32 | 0 |
88.1241 | Rodriguez up | BALL4::KURAS | another chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Fri May 06 1994 10:50 | 7 |
| Carlos Rodriguez (ss, .38mumble?) was called up to replace Viola on
the roster. Scott "I guess they have other plans right now" Hatteburg
went up to Pawtucket from New Britain this week. He replaces the injured
Georg Pedre, a catcher picked up by the Sox out of the Cubs (Iowa/AAA)
organization.
/joe
|
88.1242 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Home of the driveby noter... | Fri May 06 1994 15:18 | 2 |
| Is Valentin going to have surgery too?
|
88.1243 | | BALL4::KURAS | another chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Fri May 06 1994 15:49 | 1 |
| No word yet on Valentin or the possibility of going under the scope.
|
88.1244 | No crow in this guys future? :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Fri May 06 1994 16:31 | 8 |
|
Weekend prediction!
FRI Yanks 3-1 SAT Yanks 7-3 SUNDAY Yanks 12-3.
Sox Fold starts in MAY!
|
88.1245 | Oh, yeah and real and aged golf | AKOCOA::BREEN | Holy Cow its Holy Bull | Fri May 06 1994 16:40 | 3 |
| what a weekend,
sox-yanks, zillions of nba,nhl playoffs, two sets of fights,
kentucky derby... am I missing anything?
|
88.1246 | 8^) | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Fri May 06 1994 17:09 | 7 |
| Yea billte,
Ya gots kids? Well if ya miss Sunday you'll be missin' the bigbed
if'n ya catch me drift...
MikeL
|
88.1247 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | Mets in '94 | Fri May 06 1994 17:18 | 5 |
| Unless billte's wife is like many sane people I know who refuse to
"celebrate" "Hallmark holidays". Oh yeah those people are moms.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1248 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 06 1994 17:25 | 4 |
| � sox-yanks, zillions of nba,nhl playoffs, two sets of fights,
� kentucky derby... am I missing anything?
New Haven Old Black RFC at Worcester RFC
|
88.1249 | Bambino was hovering Baby!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Mon May 09 1994 09:01 | 5 |
|
SWEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEPPPPPP
|
88.1250 | Try Ritalin, Mike! | MKFSA::LONG | Two score ain't so bad | Mon May 09 1994 09:23 | 6 |
| Mike Greenwell sure showed his maturity yesterday by beating the
hell out of the bat rack after striking out. But at least he didn't
try and snap the bat over his knee and cripple himself.
billl
|
88.1251 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 09:39 | 12 |
| >
> To me, it's a pleasure to watch a professional ball player that plays
> hard at all times while being very productive as well.
>
He couldn't carry Reggie Smith's jock.
Mr. "Oh my stomach is upset" had a fine weekend, didn't he.
I'll give you this. He probably could have made a better throw than
Tinsley, not that it would have done any good....
'Saw
|
88.1252 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 09:40 | 9 |
| >
> I'm just thinking that the longer we keep this Greenwell thing going,
> and the higher he rises on the Sawmain's personal Torr scale, the
> better the weekend he'll have against the Yanks. Thanks, 'Saw!
Great weekend, eh Glenn?
Or was he just too woozy from gettin' hit in the shoulder?
|
88.1253 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 09:41 | 14 |
| > Mike Greenwell sure showed his maturity yesterday by beating the
> hell out of the bat rack after striking out. But at least he didn't
> try and snap the bat over his knee and cripple himself.
Already was crippled.
Had a big boo-boo on his shoulder that made his tummy ache....
Nice big 0-fer yesterday from the Sox high caliber left fielder that
is so beloved by everyone.....
'Saw
|
88.1254 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 09:45 | 26 |
| Tough weekend for Boston sports.
A few musings:
Instead of putting a sign up in the locker room that said
"Keep your head up you're still in first", Butch shoulda put
a sign up that said "Keep your butt down on grounders"
Good move Butch, bringing in a rusty Russell in Saturday
to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. Ryan did
a nice job the inning before, too bad Meatballs Russell
couldn't back it up.
Yanks swept, no big deal, still early in the season
and obviously they are over-achieving (hear that Chappy?)
Russell's a whiner -- no way the guy left early from
3rd and it wouldn't have mattered one way or the other.
I suppose Greenwell's bullet arm might have pegged off
that runner at home though....
That new shortstop Rodgriguez looks okay to me...
'Saw
|
88.1255 | Quiet bats, poor infield defense, bad managing...blam Greenwell | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 09 1994 09:54 | 24 |
|
Let the turncoats pile on... at least Greenwell knows what's an
important ballgame and was right back out there yesterday after taking
that ball off the elbow Saturday (an important baserunner, at the time,
ahead of just one of Mo Vaughn's titanic blasts). Half the rest
of the team is in the trainer's room. Greenwell broke his bat on the
batrack? Good. That's what all 25 men should have been feeling by
that point of the weekend. Lead me to a batrack right now and I'll
do the same thing. Is there a water cooler in this building? ;-)
Actually, I had quite a good time at The Stadium Saturday. There was,
as reported, a playoff-type atmosphere present, where whatever might
have been lacking in attendance was made up for by vocal but relatively
well-behaved fans from both sides. A tremendous game, too, marred only
by the ugly decision to bring Jeff Russell into the game coming off
8 days inactivity. I thought we were home free for a minute, too, as
Russell didn't get up to warm until late in the top of the 9th. I was
sitting in the upper boxes behind the Red Sox' dugout and it was very
obvious that Ken Ryan's fastball had about 3-5 mph more on it than even
Clemens' had, plus he was showing reasonable control (his only problem,
really). I guess Butch didn't see it that way...
glenn
|
88.1256 | Not a bad weekend, but a return to reality | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass - 1995 NCAA Champs! | Mon May 09 1994 10:05 | 35 |
| Nice to see Russell got the side out in order at the end of the game
YESTERDAY - you were a day late Russell, you whiny wussball.
Here are a few facks about the Red Flops:
1) They were fortunate to play the AL West in April.
2) They are a thin team that cain't afford injuries.
3) They are currently injured.
4) Putting #2 and #3 together spells trouble. I said before the
season started that this is a .500 team. Despite the 20-10 start,
I'll stick with that prediction.
Now an opinion or two:
1) Otis Nixon was way overrated coming in here. He is a 35 year old
ex-druggie who played only two full seasons as a starter in his entire
career. He needs two throws to reach second base from the flagpole.
A speed guy with hamstring problems is not good.
2) The hot prospect brought up to replace Valentin (Gonzalez) is far
from a phenom. This is a 26 year old guy released by the Mets, who
were desperate for a shortstop at the start of the season.
3) Dave Valle?
4) Joe Hesketh?
5) The infield of Cooper, Naehring, Fletcher, and Vaughn is the slowest
in the major league since the Redf Sox of 1963 with Malzone, Bressoud,
Mantilla, and Stuart.
NAZZ
|
88.1257 | | MKFSA::LONG | Two score ain't so bad | Mon May 09 1994 10:06 | 14 |
| >> Greenwell broke his bat on the
>> batrack? Good. That's what all 25 men should have been feeling by
>> that point of the weekend. Lead me to a batrack right now and I'll
>> do the same thing. Is there a water cooler in this building? ;-)
Hmmm...so you think this type of behavior is good????? You must
be one of those that cheer when some dope charges the mound.
BTW Greenwell didn't get hit in the shoulder. He got hit in the
tricep.
billl
|
88.1258 | Geez, I guess he should get a 5-game suspension... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 09 1994 10:22 | 10 |
|
> Hmmm...so you think this type of behavior is good????? You must
> be one of those that cheer when some dope charges the mound.
I saw what Greenwell did. He shattered a bat with one swing against
the batrack. BFD. I can hardly equate this brief show of emotion with
an attempt to go out on the field and hurt someone...
glenn
|
88.1259 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 10:25 | 18 |
| > BTW Greenwell didn't get hit in the shoulder. He got hit in the
> tricep.
Paper reported it as the shoulder.
Anyway, he was whining about seeing seams imprints in his skin.
Greenwell should save some of that energy spent on hitting the backrack
for concentration at the plate --- that and sucking it up when you're
a little bit injured...
Nazz, why does Nixon's being a recovering drug addict have anything to
do with it? Or is that just part of a POPB?
'Saw
|
88.1260 | SWEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEeeep | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Mon May 09 1994 10:26 | 18 |
|
Saw Over-Achieve ThIS.
It's nice to look in the AL Stats and see a RED SUX Catcher with
the worst BA in the AL. Oh it's not Pena it's Valle. :-)
No Red Sox fan should ever talk bad about snuffy again because
they have been choking on the BIG BONE for 76 YEARS.
Isn't that Scott Cooper with 7 errors? Listening to RKO yesterday
afternoon, the bandwagon is half empty. Or for optimists like Glen and
Brews HALF FULL.
Chappy
|
88.1261 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 10:27 | 10 |
| > -< Geez, I guess he should get a 5-game suspension... >-
Nah, but he might try getting a life....
Not that his at-bat really meant anything though.... I'm not sure
if the other three that day did or not....
'Saw
|
88.1262 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 10:29 | 26 |
| >
> It's nice to look in the AL Stats and see a RED SUX Catcher with
> the worst BA in the AL. Oh it's not Pena it's Valle. :-)
So what's so different about that?
> No Red Sox fan should ever talk bad about snuffy again because
> they have been choking on the BIG BONE for 76 YEARS.
You only choke when you have it in the bag and lose it. That to me
spells 1986.
At least they're not yanking the bone like Steinbrenner does...
> Isn't that Scott Cooper with 7 errors? Listening to RKO yesterday
> afternoon, the bandwagon is half empty. Or for optimists like Glen and
> Brews HALF FULL.
Oh yeah, and who's right behind him with 6 Chappy? Or don't you read
the Yanks stats that are shitty? ;^)
'Saw
|
88.1263 | 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Mon May 09 1994 10:35 | 8 |
|
I've never liked Boggs and you will never see me praising him. I was
just replying to someones reference to Boggs and his 5 errors lasted
week.
BTW how many does Donnie Baseball have?
|
88.1264 | Blame it on his parents! | MKFSA::LONG | Two score ain't so bad | Mon May 09 1994 10:40 | 17 |
| Glenn, I can't say I'm totally suprised that you missed the point
completely. BTW, you did say you were sitting 'behind' the Sox
dugout, right? That means you couldn't possibly have known that
the Red Sox pitching coach was sitting just a few feet away from
said bat rack. Woulda made Greenwell look like an even bigger
jerk had he caused someone else to be injured with his juvenile
temper tantrum.
Temper tantrums like that have no place in an any adult's life,
much less in professional sports. IMHO
(I guess =bob= would say it's because he was spanked as a kid.)
billl
|
88.1265 | I have no qualms about watching these guys play... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 09 1994 10:42 | 18 |
|
> Isn't that Scott Cooper with 7 errors? Listening to RKO yesterday
> afternoon, the bandwagon is half empty. Or for optimists like Glen and
> Brews HALF FULL.
Damn straight, Chap. Actually, I'm not really an optimist, as witnessed
by my comments to Heiser last week. I don't believe that this Red Sox
team is any better than the Yanks, only that they're close enough to
make things interesting. As for this weekend, I tip my cap to the
Yankees, who did whatever it took as a team to win the ballgames, be it
finding the hole with an infield hit or moving the runners along so that
a sac fly could plate the run. As for the Red Sox, at this point I just
refuse to flay into their hides because they lost these games. I
thought they played their butts off in the proper spirit of
Yankees-Red Sox. I have no complaints about the effort...
glenn
|
88.1266 | Sorry, I just don't think it's that big a deal... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 09 1994 10:50 | 20 |
|
> BTW, you did say you were sitting 'behind' the Sox
> dugout, right?
That was Saturday.
> Glenn, I can't say I'm totally suprised that you missed the point
> completely.
You said "you must be one of those that cheer when some dope charges
the mound". No, I didn't miss that point. If that's what you think
it's flat wrong. I don't condone what Greenwell did but it's not the
same, even if someone were to accidently (as opposed to purposely) get
hurt. I can see where a ballplayer would do what Greenwell did in that
situation. In fact, I've seen it dozens of times, and more often than
not it depending on what one thinks of the particular player it's
shrugged off as part of being "a competitor".
glenn
|
88.1267 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 10:52 | 18 |
| > refuse to flay into their hides because they lost these games. I
> thought they played their butts off in the proper spirit of
> Yankees-Red Sox. I have no complaints about the effort...
Glenn, I've got to disagree with you on Saturday's game at least.
That game should have been won, until Butch pulled one of his boneheaded
moves and brought Russell in. Russell could have been a waiter in
an Italian Restaurant in the South End of Hartford on Saturday, he
served so many meatballs.
Then, to really make it stink, he whines about the runner leaving
3rd early. If his eyes where that good, why the hell couldn't he
find the strike zone?
'Saw
|
88.1268 | Nixon is also in the Top 10 for ugliest athletes ... | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Mon May 09 1994 10:56 | 23 |
| re: Otis
Despite wearing the "ex-Drugie" albatross, Nixon is pretty much a class
act. He just so happens to live right around the corner from yours
truly, in the same subdivision as Tom Glavine and Deion Sanders.
(Inexplicably, Dave Winfield has just plunked down BIG bucks to build
in the same neighborhood ...)
Nixon is an electronics nut who owns one a them cool gadget stores in a
just-completed mall down the road a spell. Not surprisingly, Otis
hasn't put his house up for sale since signing with the Sox.
Despite bailing out of the '91 season because of a drug relapse, Otis
remained (and remains) popular in Atlanta, probably because he's a
pro's pro who does boo-koo charity work. Exactly why a team that plays
in a bandbox would sign an aging speedster with no throwing arm is a
question only the inept Red Sox management can answer. IMO Nixon would
be a good choice for a team missing one piece to get over the top. In
Boston, he'll be the difference between whether they win 75 or 80
games.
- ACC Chris
|
88.1269 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon May 09 1994 10:58 | 10 |
| � Good move Butch, bringing in a rusty Russell in Saturday
� to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. Ryan did
� a nice job the inning before, too bad Meatballs Russell
� couldn't back it up.
Yabbut, Russell sure did look good on Sunday, didn't he?
Why bring a guy who hasn't touched a baseball for a couple of weeks
into a game like that? I realize that's what Russell is paid to do,
but howzabout a little common sense instead of blind faith in the book?
|
88.1270 | Gonzalez?? | BALL4::KURAS | another chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Mon May 09 1994 10:58 | 14 |
| re a whole bunch back, from NAZZ
Valentin's shortstop is not Gonzalez. It's Carlos Rodriguez. And, he
came from the Yankees, not the Mets. Most importantly, he is not
regarded as a phenom or a prospect. He's a veteran minor leaguer, with
some MLB experience, who can play multiple positions.
I'd label him as a Luis Rivera wannabe that comes a lot cheaper. He is
capbable of filling the hole at short while Valentin heals. I expect
him to right the Fenway-McCoy shuttle for another year or 2, until
either a bona fide prospect or another minor league veteran is ready to
push him out.
/joe
|
88.1271 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon May 09 1994 11:04 | 6 |
| � 2) The hot prospect brought up to replace Valentin (Gonzalez) is far
� from a phenom. This is a 26 year old guy released by the Mets, who
� were desperate for a shortstop at the start of the season.
It's Rodriguez and he's from the Yankees organization. He also hit a
HR in his first game as a starter for the Sox.
|
88.1272 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 11:12 | 14 |
| > Yabbut, Russell sure did look good on Sunday, didn't he?
I was thinking about that too. Great when there's no save on the
line.
> Why bring a guy who hasn't touched a baseball for a couple of weeks
> into a game like that? I realize that's what Russell is paid to do,
> but howzabout a little common sense instead of blind faith in the book?
Maybe because Butch hasn't managed long enough to learn what to throw
out of the book?
|
88.1273 | too bad | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Mon May 09 1994 12:48 | 2 |
| I didn't catch the score from yesterday, but I take it they were
broomed.
|
88.1274 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Mon May 09 1994 12:51 | 8 |
|
8-4 Yanks
And YES!!!!!!!
|
88.1275 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 13:10 | 15 |
| > 8-4 Yanks
>
>
The 3rd game of the series was the only one that wasn't close.
I didn't see Friday's game, but the Sox were in it until Cooper blew
a grounder I think.
Saturday's game was less a Yankee win than a total Russell suck job
and typical Butch mismanagement (gee, he could work for DEC if he
wanted to)
'Saw
|
88.1276 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Holtz, ACC Crisp, TC* | Mon May 09 1994 14:47 | 11 |
| It's hard to believe that the same guy who wrote this:
>I'm not gloating about the Yankees record or where they stand, but
>I love you Sox fans all chippy and cheerful in the 1st week of May.
>Chap
Is the same guy whooo has wet his pants over a sweep in May.
brews
|
88.1277 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Mon May 09 1994 14:59 | 4 |
|
Check my pants day are not wet.
|
88.1278 | Where is Dick Williams when you really need him. :*) | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Mon May 09 1994 15:02 | 15 |
|
re Glen a bunch back
How can you say that the Sox played all three games up to the level
of the Sox-Yankmee tradition. The where emotionless on Sunday. Vaughn
was himself and Greenwell broke a bat but they just played out the
string plain and simple. I refuse to jump off the bandwagon been on it
to long wouldn't know how to get home but Butch has to go. It seems
that any time he HAS to manage he makes the wrong decision. He sucks
real bad. Nuff said about that dope. We got the Brew crew and the
biggest whinner of them all in for three and if they don't sweep and
take 2 of 3 from the wounded Jays I say the Butcher will be gone.
Jerry
|
88.1279 | no thanks | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Mon May 09 1994 15:02 | 1 |
| Check your pants day?
|
88.1280 | Unreasonable expectations for Nixon puts lots of pressure on him | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass - 1995 NCAA Champs! | Mon May 09 1994 15:04 | 31 |
| Yeah, I'm sure glad Butch let Valle hit for himself in what was it, the
eighth or the ninth inning of one game over the weekend.
I guess I'm always a bit skittish regarding relasped drug offenders.
Guys that got busted once and have stayed clean since aren't as big
a concern as a guy who has already had one relapse. I appreciate the
fact that he has been a good citizen for three years and is supposed to
be a heck of a guy; I just think the pressure heaped on him before the
season even started is a lot to ask someone to handle. Nick Cafardo
calling Nixon one of the top five centerfielders in baseball not only
is absurd on the face of it, but puts unnecessary and unwanted pressure
on the guy to perform beyond his capabilities.
I would take the following American league centerfielders ahead of
Nixon:
1) Ken Griffey - Seattle
2) Ken Lofton - Cleveland
3) Devon White - Toronto
4) Chad Curtis - California
5) Brian McRae - Kansas City
6) Lance Johnson - Chicago
And I would think carefully about trading Nixon even up for David Hulse
of Texas, Mike Devereaux of Baltimore, Eric Davis of Detroit, or Darryl
Hamilton of Milwaukee. And that's not even considering Brady Anderson
or Kirby Puckett as centerfielders.
As for Rodriguez, I got my facks messed up. Sorry!
NAZZ
|
88.1281 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 15:11 | 35 |
| |
| Yeah, I'm sure glad Butch let Valle hit for himself in what was it, the
| eighth or the ninth inning of one game over the weekend.
|
I'm still sitting here trying to figure out WHY Butch would put in
a rusty Russell in the 9th.
Yeah, whoopee, so he's the closer. Why not wait one more day, when you're
either down big, or up big, to work him back in. I mean, you don't
have to be a rocket scientist to figure that out. But I guess a guy
named Laverne just doesn't get it.
So in comes Howdy Doody Russell (who looks a lot like Jody Reed to me)
and tosses two strikes, and I'm thinking "Okay, cool, shah, he can get
them out....
Then it's like the Italian Fest -- wanna meatball? wanna some cheeze
with that meatball? wanna meatball no sauce????
Unreal.
And Butch sits there and lets him dig the hole deeper and deeper and
deeper.
Mistake one was taking Ryan out. Mistake two was putting Russell in,
but hey, after two batters wasn't it pretty plain that he just didn't
have his stuff?
Hello, Earth to Butch, Earth to Butch????
|
88.1282 | Exactly where was the effort lacking? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 09 1994 15:36 | 17 |
|
> How can you say that the Sox played all three games up to the level
> of the Sox-Yankmee tradition. The where emotionless on Sunday.
That's not what I saw. They hit home runs to erase a one-run lead
twice. Quantrill stuck Leyritz in the arm with a fastball in what
I'm convinced was a message delivered in response to Leyritz'
tough-guy bench exuberance (no offense to Leyritz; that's the kind of
player you love to have, someone to get his team fired up even if he
knows he'll draw the ire of the opponent). Down 6-3 Mo Vaughn hit a
475-ft home run. And even down 8-4 the Sox put two on in the eighth
and looked like they might make it interesting. Granted, the
bullpen caved in and they didn't get it done, but I don't think the
Sox rolled over and died or anything.
glenn
|
88.1283 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 15:38 | 11 |
| > 475-ft home run. And even down 8-4 the Sox put two on in the eighth
> and looked like they might make it interesting. Granted, the
> bullpen caved in and they didn't get it done, but I don't think the
> Sox rolled over and died or anything.
Yeah, and that guy who plays left managed to strike out in the clutch
in that inning after swinging at two bad pitches...
'Saw
|
88.1284 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 15:42 | 23 |
| Okay, granted, losing three to the Yankees at this stage is pretty
meaningless.
But, there were some VERY strong indicators that make me feel very
uncomfortable. Mainly, they center around pitching, and Butch's
ability to handle pitchers and handle managerial decisions concerning
pitchers.
But other factors are the infield (get your butts down boys) and
now the injury factor to the starting rotation.
If those indicators were not there, then I'd very easily laugh off
this past weekend as a spot of bad luck against a rival. But those
indicators are a huge cloud looming on the horizon.
Butch's sign about "head's up, you're still in first" could VERY
quickly change into "head's up, let's set out sights and get out
of the cellar"
'Saw
|
88.1285 | Whatever... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 09 1994 15:48 | 14 |
|
> Yeah, and that guy who plays left managed to strike out in the clutch
> in that inning after swinging at two bad pitches...
Yeah, well, I know that Greenwell was singlehandedly responsible for
all three losses (okay, with a little help from Russell and Hobson),
but with all the LH pitching the Sox saw all weekend it would have been
nice if some of the RH hitters (namely Dawson, Hatcher and Fletcher,
who went about 1-for-25 combined) could have hit the ball out of the
infield just once. But, Greenwell gets paid the big bucks to be the
fall guy for the whole team, so so be it...
glenn
|
88.1286 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 15:57 | 32 |
| > Yeah, well, I know that Greenwell was singlehandedly responsible for
> all three losses (okay, with a little help from Russell and Hobson),
I never said that. I just keep hearing from everyone how he's this
big offensive powerhouse and God's Gift to Left Field, and how lucky
we are that we have him and I should appreciate his play.
I guess he can't be that great if he can't hit left handed pitching...8^)
> but with all the LH pitching the Sox saw all weekend it would have been
> nice if some of the RH hitters (namely Dawson, Hatcher and Fletcher,
> who went about 1-for-25 combined) could have hit the ball out of the
> infield just once. But, Greenwell gets paid the big bucks to be the
> fall guy for the whole team, so so be it...
Never said he was the fall guy.
But Mr. Amazing didn't DO anything either. Oh, I forgot, he had a boo-boo
on his arm...
;^)
'Saw
|
88.1287 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon May 09 1994 16:09 | 10 |
| �I never said that. I just keep hearing from everyone how he's this
�big offensive powerhouse and God's Gift to Left Field, and how lucky
�we are that we have him and I should appreciate his play.
He does provide good offense, noone said he was God's Gift to Left
Field, and you should appreciate his play.
So who is going to take Viola's spot in the rotation? Judging by the
work Quantrill is still getting out of the pen, I take it it ain't
gonna be him.
|
88.1288 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Mon May 09 1994 16:15 | 16 |
| > So who is going to take Viola's spot in the rotation? Judging by the
> work Quantrill is still getting out of the pen, I take it it ain't
> gonna be him.
>
Maybe Butch, the Consumate Pitcher's Manager will go with a hell-fired
four man rotation: Clemens, Darwin, Sele and Hesketh....
And let the chips fall where they may.
Harris could get a start or two as the fifth man. But with Butch, it's
anyone's guess.....
'Saw
|
88.1289 | | KALVIN::MORGAN | | Mon May 09 1994 17:05 | 5 |
| They've called up Gar Finnvold from Pawtucket. I wasn't real impressed
with him in spring training and was hoping it would be Tim Vanegmond,
but Finnvold must be doing a better job.
Steve
|
88.1290 | | METSNY::francus | Rangers,Knicks,Mets in '94 | Mon May 09 1994 17:08 | 7 |
| re: .1289
you are trying to be logical; remember this is the Red Sox you're talking
about.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1291 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon May 09 1994 17:14 | 1 |
| Hey, TCM, what's the Mets' record these days?
|
88.1292 | not sure what record has to do with it, but anyway ... | METSNY::francus | Rangers,Knicks,Mets in '94 | Mon May 09 1994 17:15 | 9 |
| Mets are 16-14 these days. But 'ya see unlike those folks in here
who were jumpin' fer joy lasted week, we Mets fans are being realistic
and rooting for a .500 season and a good showing from the young players.
Sorry to disappoint 'ya Mac, you probably thought the Mets were 10-20 or
something like that.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1293 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon May 09 1994 17:17 | 6 |
| �Mets are 16-14 these days. But 'ya see unlike those folks in here
�who were jumpin' fer joy lasted week, we Mets fans are being realistic
�and rooting for a .500 season and a good showing from the young players.
Other than Heiser, who were all these folks jumpin' fer joy lasted
week?
|
88.1294 | just pleasantly surprised | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Mon May 09 1994 17:29 | 1 |
| I wasn't even jumpin' for joy.
|
88.1295 | Let's face it, these are not the same old Red Sox... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 09 1994 18:11 | 15 |
|
> But 'ya see unlike those folks in here
> who were jumpin' fer joy lasted week, we Mets fans are being realistic
> and rooting for a .500 season and a good showing from the young players.
So in other words, your commentary on the wisdom and logic of calling
up Young Pitcher A (Finnvold) over Young Pitcher B (Vanegmond) has
absolutely no basis in fact or knowledge. Hey, the Red Sox could have
re-hired someone like Joe McIlvaine as their new GM like the Mets did,
someone with a proven track record at dismantling talented young
organizations, who'd probably resolve this dilemma by trading off
both...
glenn
|
88.1296 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | Mets in '94 | Mon May 09 1994 23:23 | 10 |
| Yup, I have no clue who these pitchers are and frankly couldn't care
less. My comment was w.r.t the statement that the reason that one
pitcher was called up over the other is that he had better stats - even
though the person making the statement did not know that. The mistake
was assuming that logic will rule.
Sorry Glenn, try again.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1297 | Gar over Tim | BALL4::KURAS | another chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Tue May 10 1994 07:51 | 12 |
| Finnvold was called up over Vanegmond, imo, because of experience, not
stats. They both had similar records - 5-1 for Finnvold, 5-0 for
Vanegmond at the time of the call-up.
Finnvold has pitched steadily on both potent & weak teams at the AAA
level, this year & last. Vanegmond pitched all of last year at the AA
level, and got off to a rough start (if I've already stated this here
in this conference, I apologize for repeating myself. ..can't remember
if I said it here, in Red_Sox, or in Baseball). It wasn't until late
May/early June that he got squared away in New Britain last year. If
Vanegmond had put up the same numbers last year at AAA instead of AA,
he may have gotten the call this time around.
|
88.1298 | People all over Boston: Broken Ankles. JumpedEARLY | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Tue May 10 1994 08:44 | 12 |
|
BTW for those of you who were jumping for joy last week. Your SOX
are no longer in first place.
And no Brews I am not jumping for joy cuz MY team is in first I'm
just letting YOU Sox fans know that YOUR NO LONGER IN FIRST PLACE!!!!
Chappy
|
88.1299 | | USCTR1::KING | Cemeteries = Parks with nice stones... | Tue May 10 1994 09:10 | 7 |
| Chappy take a suck pill (tm)....
REK
:-}
|
88.1300 | | KALVIN::MORGAN | | Tue May 10 1994 09:19 | 3 |
| They don't hand out trophies in May, Chappy.
Steve
|
88.1301 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Tue May 10 1994 09:25 | 9 |
|
I don't want no trophy. I'm not even gloating just letting some
CHIPPY Red Sox fans know THEY ARE NO LONGER IN FIRST PLACE. (tm) :-)
Chappy
|
88.1302 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Tue May 10 1994 09:28 | 6 |
| >
> I don't want no trophy. I'm not even gloating just letting some
> CHIPPY Red Sox fans know THEY ARE NO LONGER IN FIRST PLACE. (tm) :-)
>
So?
|
88.1303 | Gar????? | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass - 1995 NCAA Champs! | Tue May 10 1994 09:32 | 4 |
| What the heck kinda name is Gar Finnvold? Wouldn't it be neat if he
announced before the game tonight that his name really is Finn Garvold?
NAZZ
|
88.1304 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Tue May 10 1994 09:36 | 6 |
| Gwar, Gwar, Gwar! YES! Gwar roolz...
Oh, sorry, you said Gar....
Forget it....
|
88.1305 | Logic does and will continue to rule under Dan Duquette | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue May 10 1994 10:11 | 10 |
|
> The mistake was assuming that logic will rule.
No, TCM, *your* mistake was the failure to notice that while Lou Gorman
is still on the Red Sox payroll, he is no longer paid to make such
mistakes...
HTH,
glenn
|
88.1306 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue May 10 1994 12:01 | 1 |
| So, Chappy, if you're not gloating, what is your point?
|
88.1307 | Wasn't no sandbaggin' and whinin' here... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue May 10 1994 12:06 | 7 |
|
Let Chappy gloat. The guy earned it, predicting a NYY sweep and coming
pretty damn close on each of the scores, no less. There's 10 more to
play head-to-head, 7 in Fenway. We have memories... ;-)
glenn
|
88.1308 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Tue May 10 1994 12:22 | 5 |
| Well when Duquette has finally done something of note I'll take note
of that.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1309 | Just tryin to be a good reporter????????? | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Tue May 10 1994 12:31 | 10 |
|
In my eyes I'm not really gloating. Just trying to shut up some
chippy cheerful SUX fans who had to remind us last week where they
stood in the standings, so I'm just here to remind THEM "THEY ARE NO
LONGER IN FIRST PLACE! (tm)
Chappy
|
88.1310 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue May 10 1994 12:52 | 18 |
| with 12 pitchers and 3 catchers vern has left himself with very little
flexibility, at least down in ny. I think he merely hoped to grab one
and let long season take care of itself.
specifically he had cooper at third against key, along with greenwell.
he would answer that he had no one else (rodgriguez arrive sat. I
think) and probably no one else for left. I would have considered
hatcher in left and tinsley or dawson in right with greenwell to ph off
the bench.
re. greenwell: how can I read that his being replaced in left field
left a defensive gap because his strong arm might have stopped the
winning run along with other greenwell griping? makes no sense
And gorman never did attach much importance to left/right but against
yankees it is critical but apparently hesketh is not the lh to do the
job. I expect duquette now to make a lh starter his major priority and
be willing to pay highly for one, if possible.
|
88.1311 | Even if they are chest-thumping, cut 'em some slack! | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Tue May 10 1994 13:32 | 9 |
| Chappy it's hard for me to believe there's a whole lotta chest-thumping
going on from Sox fans for being in first place in friggin' May.
We're talking about fans (and sadly I suppose I'm one of 'em) who have
been tormented in more ways than is humanly possible. For gawd's sake
man, have a heart!
- ACC Chris
|
88.1312 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Go Broons�! | Tue May 10 1994 13:34 | 9 |
| The first true test of Dan Duquette. Will he take the bait as so
many other GM's have done and start to feel obligated to answer the
critics who expected the Sox to contend this year by making stupid moves.
Despite what some say Duquette is doing it the right way by trying to
rebuild a fractured minor league system. It will not happen overnight.
I'm hoping Harrington and Duquette will ignore the talk show bleatings from
Joe from Medford and stay the course.
/Don
|
88.1313 | | KALVIN::MORGAN | | Tue May 10 1994 13:58 | 5 |
| Agree, Slash. Please do not trade a Rodriguez or Nixon type for an
aging lefty.
Steve
|
88.1314 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Tue May 10 1994 14:13 | 14 |
| > Agree, Slash. Please do not trade a Rodriguez or Nixon type for an
> aging lefty.
I'll 3rd that motion.
Let's just for once, try to weather the storm, and not panic and start
selling stuff off for a once-shot wonder (maybe).
Glenn, fill me in: lefties in AAA and AA, any come to mind?
'Saw
|
88.1315 | No S'paws on the farm | BALL4::KURAS | Still a chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Tue May 10 1994 14:44 | 12 |
| I'm not Glenn, but I'll take a crack at it.
The starting rotation for Pawtucket at the beginning of the season was
Minchey, Conroy, Finnvold, Vanegmond, & Rodriguez. Down in New Britain,
it was Dan Gaekler, Eddie Riley, Tim Smith, Joel Bennett, & ??
With the exception of Eddie Riley (0-2, 9.nnn, 24+ IP), I believe they
are all righthanded. Riley gave up 1 run in 14 innings this spring,
yet was slated for the bullpen in New Britain up until the last day of
Spring Training, before becoming the #2 man in the rotation.
|
88.1316 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Tue May 10 1994 14:49 | 3 |
| I guess good lefties are hard to find.
I think I'll brush up my curve-ball. Maybe Butchie can use me....
|
88.1317 | re .1315 | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue May 10 1994 15:15 | 9 |
| How can that be, one lefty of the description:
>> With the exception of Eddie Riley (0-2, 9.nnn, 24+ IP), I believe
Duquette has a lot of work in this organization; trust me, that deal
for a lefty will be made before end of month: I could see a cooper for
the equivelence of a melendez only lefty.
What's flanagan doing these days, bill lee?, jim Kaat, lefty sprockett?
|
88.1318 | Repeat the mantra: Dan's the Man... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue May 10 1994 15:36 | 29 |
|
Shawn Senior is the top LHP prospect in the organization, and he's
pitching very well for Lynchburg in the Carolina League. He'll be up
your way in New Britain soon enough, 'Saw, probably middle of this
season. Boston by 1996 if things go well, most likely.
> Duquette has a lot of work in this organization; trust me, that deal
> for a lefty will be made before end of month: I could see a cooper for
> the equivelence of a melendez only lefty.
No way will Duquette make this kind of a deal. For prospects maybe,
but not for the kind of cannon fodder generally available in the big
leagues. There's also been some idle speculation about Jim Abbott,
who unless re-signed will hit the market this winter. The Yankees
don't yet seem to be sold on the guy. They say he's lost a few mph
on the fastball, but I still see Abbott as a guy who's at least worth
the nice 3-year contract. Even in an off-year he'd be reliable.
Duquette has repeatedly stated that the rebuilding plan is at least a
three-year effort and that he is not looking at the quick fix. He has
clearly set those expectations with the fans. His comments on media
speculation around specific individuals (like on the Van Slyke rumor,
which he claimed did not make sense) have been consistent with that
stated approach. As a charter member of Duquette Youth (our motto is
"And a French Canadian shall lead them"), I'm not at all worried about
a panic, and have the utmost faith in what Duquette is doing.
glenn
|
88.1319 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Tue May 10 1994 15:45 | 26 |
| > pitching very well for Lynchburg in the Carolina League. He'll be up
> your way in New Britain soon enough, 'Saw, probably middle of this
> season. Boston by 1996 if things go well, most likely.
I'll watch for him, and if all goes well and i get out to the park
perhaps I can give a first hand (left hand biased?) report.
> No way will Duquette make this kind of a deal. For prospects maybe,
> but not for the kind of cannon fodder generally available in the big
> leagues. There's also been some idle speculation about Jim Abbott,
> who unless re-signed will hit the market this winter. The Yankees
> don't yet seem to be sold on the guy. They say he's lost a few mph
> on the fastball, but I still see Abbott as a guy who's at least worth
> the nice 3-year contract. Even in an off-year he'd be reliable.
I dunno about Abbott. He was great with the Angels but has never done
much with the Yanks. Do you think he has anything left?
> stated approach. As a charter member of Duquette Youth (our motto is
> "And a French Canadian shall lead them"), I'm not at all worried about
> a panic, and have the utmost faith in what Duquette is doing.
If he can't lead them, at least he can probably put up a lot of dry wall.....
|
88.1320 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue May 10 1994 16:52 | 6 |
| � We're talking about fans (and sadly I suppose I'm one of 'em) who have
� been tormented in more ways than is humanly possible.
After years of trying so hard to divest himself of New England, ACChris
comes whimpering back trying to garner some sympathy. PHHHHHPPPPTTTTTT
|
88.1321 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Wed May 11 1994 10:03 | 4 |
|
:^)
|
88.1322 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Yes I Am !!! | Wed May 11 1994 10:16 | 5 |
|
Rocket Roger becomes a 10/5 man today May 11th. The Sox can no longer
trade Roger without getting his approval first.
Ron
|
88.1323 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Wed May 11 1994 10:18 | 6 |
| > Rocket Roger becomes a 10/5 man today May 11th. The Sox can no longer
>trade Roger without getting his approval first.
Fill me in....what's a 10/5 man?
I assume the 10 is 10 years in the show, but what's the 5?
|
88.1324 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed May 11 1994 10:23 | 3 |
| �I assume the 10 is 10 years in the show, but what's the 5?
5 years with the same club.
|
88.1325 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Wed May 11 1994 10:29 | 6 |
| |�I assume the 10 is 10 years in the show, but what's the 5?
|
| 5 years with the same club.
|
Thanks. I thought that might be it, but wasn't sure....
|
88.1326 | It's only a matter of time before we see Vanegmondd | KALVIN::MORGAN | | Wed May 11 1994 11:16 | 9 |
| Finnvold did pretty well last night although I wasn't particularly
impressed, not that that means anything! I was just waiting for
Milwaukee to start teeing off him, but he did spot the ball well
when he had to. He's got an odd delivery and I don't recall seeing
him throw anything but a fastball and slider. A pitcher with average
speed and no curve won't be collecting too many paychecks at the major
league level though.
Steve
|
88.1327 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Wed May 11 1994 11:21 | 18 |
| >
> Finnvold did pretty well last night although I wasn't particularly
> impressed, not that that means anything! I was just waiting for
> Milwaukee to start teeing off him, but he did spot the ball well
> when he had to. He's got an odd delivery and I don't recall seeing
> him throw anything but a fastball and slider. A pitcher with average
> speed and no curve won't be collecting too many paychecks at the major
> league level though.
C'mon Steve, can't you say anything good about anybody? 8^) 8^) 8^) 8^)
I only saw highlights on the late news, but it looks at if he got
tagged pretty well. Or were some of those long ball hits off our
illustrious bullpen?
'Saw
|
88.1328 | Finnvold will probably be an innings sink at best... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 11 1994 11:47 | 16 |
|
Yes, that was pretty much my impression of Finnvold, too, Steve (I
wasn't questioning your spring training assessment of Finnvold, as I
said the same thing of his all-arm fallaway delivery and have agreed
that I wouldn't mind moving this kid as opposed to a Vanegmond--
however, I do understand why they're going with the more experienced
pitcher to fill this hole for now). Finnvold was also the beneficiary
of the hugest strike zone you'll ever see. Above-home replays showed
that a pitch just inside the opposite batter's box was consistently
called a strike. But, all in all, a solid, composed effort. It's just
too bad the Sox' suddenly combustible bullpen couldn't find even this
new and improved 22-inch home plate and deprived the kid what should
have been an easy win in his debut...
glenn
|
88.1329 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Wed May 11 1994 12:00 | 10 |
| > Yes, that was pretty much my impression of Finnvold, too, Steve (I
> wasn't questioning your spring training assessment of Finnvold, as I
> said the same thing of his all-arm fallaway delivery and have agreed
I didn't see him enough to remember his delivery, but it sounds akin
to what Mitch "Wild Thing" Williams does. Is is similar?
'Saw
|
88.1330 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 11 1994 12:21 | 8 |
|
> I didn't see him enough to remember his delivery, but it sounds akin
> to what Mitch "Wild Thing" Williams does. Is is similar?
Yes, same type of thing, but nowhere near as bad. Mitch is one of
a kind...
|
88.1331 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Wed May 11 1994 13:58 | 14 |
| |
| Yes, same type of thing, but nowhere near as bad. Mitch is one of
| a kind...
|
I remember one pitcher, from Baltimore I think, who had a similar delivery
and his glove would end up near his butt, and every once in a while he'd
actually field a liner like that. More luck than anything else, but
definitely weird to see...
'Saw
|
88.1332 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels and Raw Beef | Wed May 11 1994 13:58 | 5 |
| I guess Greg Harris gets the Chainsaw's FireStarter Award for last night's
inept performance....8^)
'Saw
|
88.1333 | Baltimore '82? | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed May 11 1994 16:44 | 10 |
| One thing a team needs to contend is a good start (many exceptions). If
sox are contending next month then duquette shouldn't wait. How many
chances will he get.
But he won't seriously contend without a quality lefthander and really
should have two. Even if he's not going to try for it all this year he
should trade a quality right handed prospect for same-same southpaw.
I mean isn't it a trivia question "what team one a pennant without a
lefty in starting rotation?"
|
88.1334 | If it's a problem, it's a problem almost everywhere | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 11 1994 17:13 | 22 |
|
> I mean isn't it a trivia question "what team one a pennant without a
> lefty in starting rotation?"
It can be done. Minnesota 1991 won it all with essentially
Morris/Tapani/Erickson/stiffs of the week (no lefthanded postseason
starts). Toronto did the same in 1993 after losing Key *and* Wells
with Guzman/Hentgen/Stewart/Morris/Stottlemyre. Oakland's core was
Stewart/Welch/Moore. I think it's an overrated thing, especially if
you're just pushing a Frank Tanana out there for appearance's sake.
I'd rather have another good RH starter than an average or poor lefty.
There just aren't that many good ones, so obviously any inherent
advantage gained by the LHP isn't currently being realized by many of
these creatures around the majors. I'm more concerned with the lack
of an effective lefty out of the bullpen, which is a subset of the
concern over the lack of any effective relievers (save Ken Ryan) at the
moment. That's the guy you can use to neutralize platoon advantages,
which the LH starter doesn't generally get because the opponent stacks
the lineups to start the game.
glenn
|
88.1335 | And when I say NewYork I only mean one NY | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed May 11 1994 17:55 | 15 |
| Toronto is the team I was thinking of. And they had so much talent
they could get away with it; but if they stay too close to yankees they
may wish Key was back with them. NewYork (always have, always will I
guess) still subscribes to the philosophy heavily.
I guess Fossas isn't the guy, eh?
In small 5 and 6 team conferences perhaps teams can get away with
things but sox with toronto and yankees (and perhaps baltimore) should
have a lefty and yes not tanana (or flanagan).
I think the lefty/righty thing is part of fundementals but fundementals
are ignored in so many areas why not this. CF defense is only
unneglected area but this seems to be an unlooked for benefit of
athleticism not pure skill.
|
88.1336 | | TOOK::HALPIN | Jim Halpin | Wed May 11 1994 18:00 | 10 |
|
>may wish Key was back with them. NewYork (always have, always will I
>guess) still subscribes to the philosophy heavily.
Gee, don't you think Yankee Stadium hassomething to do with
that????
JimH
|
88.1337 | a good lefty starter?? | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Thu May 12 1994 07:24 | 3 |
| I don't remember the sox having a good lefty in 86?? did they??
stig
|
88.1338 | What about Hurst? | BALL4::KURAS | Still a chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Thu May 12 1994 08:16 | 9 |
| re -1
< I don't remember the sox having a good lefty in 86?? did they??
Stig, did you intentionally omit the smiley's at the end of your
statement? Or did you inadvertently forget about Bruce Hurst, the
"real" MVP of the '86 World Series (games 1-6, anyway)?
/joe
|
88.1339 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 12 1994 10:29 | 4 |
| � I don't remember the sox having a good lefty in 86?? did they??
Only Bruce "I woulda been WS MVP if that ball didn't go through
Buckner's legs" Hurst.
|
88.1340 | | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Thu May 12 1994 13:25 | 3 |
| boy...how soon I forget...:-(
stig
|
88.1341 | Still the best... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 10:23 | 17 |
|
Roger Clemens runs his record to 4-1, in lowering his ERA to 2.59 with
7 shutout innings of two-hit ball last night. He's definitely back.
Roger was wandering into that potential no-hit zone until Jody Reed hit
a shot to CF off him that Otis Nixon misplayed slightly (Nixon made a
couple other fine plays, though). He had to come out after 7 with leg
muscle cramps. The leg and groin muscle injuries are still the only
question marks remaining with Clemens, imo. At 31 going on 32, he's
still sitting batters down with regularity, and there's plenty left in
the arm. Putting aside the one disastrous half-season, I still say
that it's Clemens and Greg Maddux in The Pantheon, with the others
outside left to prove it over 5+ years. It's my hope that we can get
another 5 good years out of Roger (that might be greedy, minimum 3)
before he rockets off to Cooperstown.
glenn
|
88.1342 | | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Fri May 13 1994 10:26 | 6 |
| > before he rockets off to Cooperstown.
Cool line, Waugamain.
- ACC Chris
|
88.1343 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Fri May 13 1994 10:31 | 18 |
| >
> > before he rockets off to Cooperstown.
>
> Cool line, Waugamain.
Yep, agreed.
Clemens is still an imposing pitcher, no doubt about it. And these days,
7 innings work is a quality game from a starter.
There is something primal in being a fastball pitcher, and yet I think
it's also a craft as demanding as watchmaking or diamond cutting. Clemens,
no matter how you look at it, or whether you like him or not, is one of
the best....
'Saw
|
88.1344 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 10:47 | 8 |
| He was on WBCN this morning. He was asked about what happened. His
explanation was that he must have been a bit dehydrated and his calf
cramped up and may have a slight strain. He said he feels fine this
morning. He was dissapointed he couldn't pitch the entire game,
especially with the score that close.
What was with Bones kicking over a water cooler in the dugout after he
got pulled?
|
88.1345 | | TNPUBS::ALVEY | Drive-by body-piercing | Fri May 13 1994 10:47 | 3 |
| ...and he knocks Jody Reed down.
Was that 'cuz Reed broke up his no hitter
or just general principles?
|
88.1346 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 10:49 | 7 |
| �...and he knocks Jody Reed down.
�Was that 'cuz Reed broke up his no hitter
�or just general principles?
Reed was knocked down in an earlier at bat. Clemens said Jody likes
the ball on the inside half of the plate, so if you want to move him
off it, you have to come way inside.
|
88.1347 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Fri May 13 1994 11:01 | 24 |
| > Reed was knocked down in an earlier at bat. Clemens said Jody likes
> the ball on the inside half of the plate, so if you want to move him
> off it, you have to come way inside.
Good baseball, IMO.
Now, if I were Roger, and it's the 7th inning, and I've got a one-run
lead, I want to finish the game.
Why?
Simple. I know that the closer that the team has sucks pond water.
I'm going to leave the game with a one-run lead and Russell is going to
come in, stink the place up, and you can chalk up another one in the L
column.
I'd want to stay in suffering anything less than a myocardial infarction....
Russell sucks.
'SA
|
88.1348 | Yes, good pitching indeed...but Jody did rebound later | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 11:07 | 11 |
|
> Was that 'cuz Reed broke up his no hitter or just general principles?
I don't know what it was, but I chose to interpret it as "Take that,
you whining little carp!" But it was a thing of beauty, as the
previous pitch was wild outside, and Reed started stiffing that
inside corner. Then Roger got a call on a borderline slider on the
outside corner to sit Reed down, and Jody started fussin' some more...
glenn
|
88.1349 | just wondering out loud | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Fri May 13 1994 11:11 | 8 |
| <<< Note 88.1341 by NAC::G_WAUGAMAN >>>
-< Still the best... >-
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
but given that Maddux hasn't slipped or had a bad season wouldn't
he be the best?
mike
|
88.1350 | | DOCTP::TESSIER | | Fri May 13 1994 11:15 | 10 |
| I hope Clemens has a monster season, but I'm not convinced that
he is back to "still the best" status yet. Clemens has typically
looked very impressive in April and May. What I want to know is this:
is he going to still look impressive in August? Or are we going to
be hearing stories about groin pulls (by the way, he must have suffered
the most devestating groin pull in history because we've heard about
it now for two years!) and vague arm problems the way we have the past
three seasons?
Ken
|
88.1351 | 2 Master Craftsmen, practicing their art ... | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Fri May 13 1994 11:16 | 6 |
| Things I'd like to be a fly on the wall for:
Roger Clemens and Greg Maddux in a room together, talking pitching.
- ACC Chris
|
88.1352 | | MKFSA::LONG | Two score ain't so bad | Fri May 13 1994 11:20 | 6 |
| Just to put things inperspective, I wouldn't call Clemens' first
several starts impressive at all. To say he had an imppressive
April is a stretch of TCS proportions.
billl
|
88.1353 | | KALVIN::MORGAN | | Fri May 13 1994 11:28 | 15 |
| That was an old fashioned brush back pitch to Reed. Reed was ready to
dive into the pitch when it came sailing at his chin. I think the ball
actually went between his hands and chin, as it came real close to
hitting him. Clemens came back with the breaking pitch on the outside
corner of the plate and Reed flied to center. His next at bat was a
double that one bounced off the center field wall. It almost looked
like Otis could have had it, but...
Speaking of Otis, he's made at least a half dozen catches that I've
seen this year, that Hatcher would have no business hauling in. Never
mind all the singles to center that would fall in regularly with Hatcher
playing a deep center field. Otis can keep his .250 average and
continue playing an excellent center field in my book.
Steve
|
88.1354 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Fri May 13 1994 11:32 | 13 |
| > playing a deep center field. Otis can keep his .250 average and
> continue playing an excellent center field in my book.
>
What's the clich�....
There's no substitute for speed?
(or am I thinking of "you can't teach speed"?)
At any rate, Otis can motor....
|
88.1355 | I'm hoping for the best, cuz I know I've seen it in the past | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 11:38 | 27 |
|
Maddux was merely very good in 1990-91, not great as he has been the
last two years. Yeah, he's probably the best at this precise moment
in time, but he's younger and hasn't been doing it for as long, nor as
well. Maddux is 120-87 career, Clemens 167-87. Sure, Greg, rip off
about 50 straight wins and you'll better the Rocket's lifetime winning
percentage (yeah, I know Maddux pitched for the Cubs but now he's
riding high with the Braves, and pitching for the Red Sox has been no
picnic the last 3 years). So I'm making some allowances for longevity
and peak performance, neither of which Maddux has matched (yet). Keep
in mind that Maddux is not an overpowering pitcher, either, and may
have less margin for error as he ages. Clemens apparently has his
pinpoint control (the problem last year) back to go with the power
pitching.
> Or are we going to
> be hearing stories about groin pulls (by the way, he must have suffered
> the most devestating groin pull in history because we've heard about
> it now for two years!) and vague arm problems the way we have the past
> three seasons?
That was my stated concern. But in those last three years that you
speak of, Clemens led the league in ERA in two of them. So are you
more concerned with the newspaper stories, or performance?
glenn
|
88.1356 | 0.80 ERA in last six starts... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 11:46 | 14 |
|
> Just to put things inperspective, I wouldn't call Clemens' first
> several starts impressive at all. To say he had an imppressive
> April is a stretch of TCS proportions.
Nope. Clemens had *one* bad start, Opening Day. The second one he
left the game having surrendered two runs, and the pen let in two more.
Since then in each of the past 6 starts there's been a "0" or a "1"
under the ER column next to his name. You don't give up 8 runs in your
first start and have your ERA down to 2.59 by mid-May without being
*very* impressive.
glenn
|
88.1357 | | MKFSA::LONG | Two score ain't so bad | Fri May 13 1994 11:50 | 7 |
| Without having the updated record book in front of me, Glenn, this
is all coming from memory. (We all know how flakey that gets.)
But I seem to recall it taking Clemens about five starts to get past
fifth inning. Not exactly what I'd call impressive.
billl
|
88.1358 | I don't think so... | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Fri May 13 1994 11:58 | 7 |
|
but my popb says that Greg plays in a manly league where he has to bat
and also you definately have to give him the better glove of the two
so as more complete player I say he gets the nod. As far as longevity
goes, Yaz had 3419 hits, Mays has 3283 hits does that make Yaz better?
mike
|
88.1359 | Not to be wise or anything, that's just not right | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 11:58 | 10 |
|
> But I seem to recall it taking Clemens about five starts to get past
> fifth inning. Not exactly what I'd call impressive.
I don't know what to tell you, billl. Clemens has been into the 7th
(and through it in every start but one) in every game since Opening Day.
Maybe you're thinking of Joe Hesketh.. ;-)
glenn
|
88.1360 | Maddux has to keep at it... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 12:04 | 16 |
|
> but my popb says that Greg plays in a manly league where he has to bat
> and also you definately have to give him the better glove of the two
> so as more complete player I say he gets the nod.
Maddux' completeness at doing all those things is reflected in his W-L
record. Still not there, about 50 wins shy...
> As far as longevity
> goes, Yaz had 3419 hits, Mays has 3283 hits does that make Yaz better?
Longevity *and* peak performance. Clemens' lifetime ERA (over more
years, in higher-offense AL) 2.94; Maddux 3.19.
glenn
|
88.1361 | Ah told him Bruce Hurst was pitchin' 8^) | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Fri May 13 1994 12:14 | 9 |
| Mebbe billl was thinking Opening Day.
Just cuz billl cain't recall anythang past inning #2 ain't no
cause to assume Rocket took a_early Dixie like Mssr. Long..8^)
MikeL
|
88.1362 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Fri May 13 1994 12:16 | 5 |
|
How many more years has Clemens been pitching that Maddux? Seeing how you're
stuck on this 50 wins thing?
mike
|
88.1363 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 12:29 | 7 |
| �(by the way, he must have suffered
�the most devestating groin pull in history because we've heard about
�it now for two years!) and vague arm problems the way we have the past
�three seasons?
Huh? The only injuries we've heard about were from last season and we
didn't hear about these until this past offseason.
|
88.1364 | runners joke. hardee har har. | CSC32::GAULKE | | Fri May 13 1994 12:34 | 10 |
|
re .1354
>> There's no substitute for speed?
Sure there is. Cuttin' the course.
|
88.1365 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 12:36 | 5 |
| � but my popb says that Greg plays in a manly league where he has to bat
You mean he has to stand in the batters box a couple of times a game.
And by pitching in that "manly" league he gets to pitch to other
pitchers.
|
88.1366 | Ah shaddup, MikeL! | MKFSA::LONG | Two score ain't so bad | Fri May 13 1994 12:38 | 16 |
| Glenn, since Opening Day is part of the regular season, and it is in
April, are you trying to tell me that Roger has made it into the
7th in every start in April except 2?
I know he took an early shower Opening Day. I'm pretty sure he
left in the 4th his next start. Then the 5th in the next one.
Like I said, this is all from memory and a conversation I had
with some friends over the same topic.
Don't get me wrong, here. I hope Clemens posts some god-like
numbers for the rest of the season, but I think his performance
in April was anything but.
billl
|
88.1367 | Through first 300 starts, winner, Clemens | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 12:38 | 13 |
|
> How many more years has Clemens been pitching that Maddux? Seeing how you're
> stuck on this 50 wins thing?
50 straight wins to match his winning percentage, not his wins. And
Clemens has pitched approximately two more full seasons. 57 more
starts, to be precise. Don't hold your breath waiting for Maddux to
match *any* of Clemens' numbers after his next 57 starts. But he will
likely outdo Clemens over just those next 57, being the three years
younger...
glenn
|
88.1368 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 12:39 | 2 |
| Well, billlllllll, you know what they say. As you age the first thing
to go is your memory.
|
88.1369 | | MKFSA::LONG | Two score ain't so bad | Fri May 13 1994 12:43 | 5 |
| Mac, since you're WAYYYYY older than me, how would you remember?
billl
|
88.1370 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 12:45 | 1 |
| I don't think so, billlllll
|
88.1371 | | MKFSA::LONG | HB Jessica! Sweet sixteen! | Fri May 13 1994 12:47 | 4 |
| Then Rugby must age you quicker.
billl
|
88.1372 | I am not making this up! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 13:03 | 22 |
|
> Glenn, since Opening Day is part of the regular season, and it is in
> April, are you trying to tell me that Roger has made it into the
> 7th in every start in April except 2?
Yes! The only game he hasn't since Opening Day was the one this
past weekend against the Yankees, where he went 6, but didn't go out
for the 7th (of course that was May, not April, but whatever).
> I know he took an early shower Opening Day. I'm pretty sure he
> left in the 4th his next start. Then the 5th in the next one.
Trust me, billl! ;-) Clemens left in the 7th in his 2nd start, a
no-decision against the White Sox. He pitched 8 in the 3rd start in
a win (1 ER) against Chicago. He pitched a 9-inning shutout in the 4th
start against Oakland. Then 7 innings (1 ER) in his only loss,
against Seattle. 8 more against California (1 ER), 6 against New York
(1 ER), 7 (0 ER) against Milwaukee. That's it. Last six starts, 45.0
innings, *4* ER, 0.80 ERA, 4-1 record. That's impressive, for anyone.
glenn
|
88.1373 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Fri May 13 1994 14:32 | 12 |
|
but winning percentage has alot to do with what team one plays for too
Glenn.
Mac, given that he has to step in there, when he does throw at someone
to get them off the plate he knows that he risks getting thrown back at.
Certainly more manly than Roger throwing at people without having
to worry about retailation. If someone hits one of Roger's teammates
he can just throw at another guy.....I doubt if Roger had to step in
there he'd throw at so many people..........
mike
|
88.1374 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Fri May 13 1994 14:37 | 17 |
| > Mac, given that he has to step in there, when he does throw at someone
> to get them off the plate he knows that he risks getting thrown back at.
> Certainly more manly than Roger throwing at people without having
> to worry about retailation. If someone hits one of Roger's teammates
> he can just throw at another guy.....I doubt if Roger had to step in
> there he'd throw at so many people..........
I don't buy that, because they don't always throw at the opposing pitcher.
Let's say Roger throws at Fielder. The next time Vaughn comes up
he's gonna get thrown at.
Yeah, sometimes pitchers get thrown at, but I don't think it would bother
Roger all that much at any rate.....
'saw
|
88.1375 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Fri May 13 1994 14:41 | 7 |
|
that cause it doesn't make much sense Saw to throw at guy who can't hit
his own weight and probably isn't crowding the plate but if like Roger
a pitcher in the NL threw at 1 or 2 guys a game, he'd get thrown at.
Especially a guy carrying an Ego the size of Roger's............
mike
|
88.1376 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 14:43 | 8 |
| When was the last time a pitcher in the NL was thrown at?
You still didn't explain away the minimum of 3 easy outs/game that
Maddux benefits from by playing in that "manly" league.
Maddux' ERA tells you the reason his winning percentage is lower than
Clemens' isn't all due to the team he was playing on. And other than
'86, this Sox team hasn't had much over the Cubs.
|
88.1377 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Fri May 13 1994 14:51 | 6 |
|
In a normal 9 inning game in the NL I would guess that a pitcher
bats closer to 2 times a game per team than 3.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1378 | Few brushbacks wouldn't make Roger a .500, or even .600, pitcher | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 14:56 | 12 |
|
We're not trying to establish who's more "manly", just who's better.
By MikeC's argument, ipso facto the NL pitcher is better than the AL
pitcher (all other things relatively equal). I don't buy that. And
things aren't relatively equal; Clemens has clearly outperformed
Maddux over the first 8-10 years of each career. Now what happens
from this point on is another matter; Maddux could be a remarkable
workhorse and end up winning 300 games, who knows (although he's got
180 to go).
glenn
|
88.1379 | | MKFSA::LONG | HB Jessica! Sweet sixteen! | Fri May 13 1994 15:18 | 13 |
| Trust you, Glenn? Fat chance!
I think you're wrong. No I don't have the facts right in front of
me right now to back it up, but I doubt you do either.
I'm certain of the trend of going out early, pre-7th, in the first
few starts.
He's obviously turned it around of late, but that isn't what I'm
refering to.
billl
|
88.1380 | | DOCTP::TESSIER | | Fri May 13 1994 15:21 | 16 |
| Re.
>�(by the way, he must have suffered
>�the most devestating groin pull in history because we've heard about
>�it now for two years!) and vague arm problems the way we have the past
>�three seasons?
> Huh? The only injuries we've heard about were from last season and we
> didn't hear about these until this past offseason.
Wrong. Clemens tailed off badly in the second half of the '92 season.
It was reported that he had suffered a groin pull. Then when he
started falling apart last season there were stories about how he
might still be suffering the lingering effects of the groin pull.
Ken
|
88.1381 | Okay, let's just pretend that he's been mediocre so far... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 15:26 | 9 |
|
> I think you're wrong. No I don't have the facts right in front of
> me right now to back it up, but I doubt you do either.
Well, I guess I'm a liar then. That line in my sports page that shows
Clemens with 8 starts, 55.2 IP (7.0 IP/start) must be a misprint.
glenn
|
88.1382 | | MKFSA::LONG | HB Jessica! Sweet sixteen! | Fri May 13 1994 15:35 | 17 |
| >> Well, I guess I'm a liar then. That line in my sports page that shows
>> Clemens with 8 starts, 55.2 IP (7.0 IP/start) must be a misprint.
Don't go getting all huffy on me now. If that's the only stat
you have in front of you, you are jumping to some huge conclusions.
That 7.0, or actually 6.9 (55.2 / 8), is called an average. Do
you know how many innings he's pitched in each the last four starts?
I mean really know, not just from your hazy memory. (Believe me,
I know what a hazy memory is.)
Over the weekend, Glenn, I'll try and track down the box scores
from his starts. Then we can see if this is just a figment of
me 'ancient' imagination.
billl
|
88.1383 | | MKFSA::LONG | HB Jessica! Sweet sixteen! | Fri May 13 1994 15:38 | 3 |
| re .1382:
Oops, I forgot 55.2 is really 55.667 so that 6.9 should be 6.958 (7.0).
|
88.1384 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 15:42 | 8 |
| Give it up, billl. You should know by now there are 2 folks you can't
question in here -- John Hendry and Glenn Waugamann.
If we subtract his first start (5 innings, 1 start) that gives 50.2
innings in 7 games. That's 7.2. Now, subtract his 1 complete game --
41.2/6 = 6.87. Given that he doesn't have any other complete games, it
would be very difficult to come up with an average of 6.87 if he didn't
last past 5 in a couple of starts.
|
88.1385 | I was only hazy for one start, too-- Opening Day! ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 15:47 | 14 |
|
I'm not getting huffy, billl. Just a little incredulous that a simple
statement of fact caused so much trouble. You agree that Clemens went
4.2 on Opening Day, right? And 7 last night? And just 6 in his last
start against the Yanks? That leaves 55.2 - 4.2 - 7 - 6 = 38 innings
in the five starts you're referring to after Opening Day. That's 7.6
innings per start in those games, with only 1 CG included. Clemens has
worked into the 7th in each of those games.
But yes, I do remember each of the games specifically as I've watched them
all. There've only been 8 so far; it's not that hard to believe...
glenn
|
88.1386 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 15:51 | 11 |
| Hey, bill, the box scores are in topic 511 of the RED_SOX notesfile.
I'll save you some time:
After first 2 starts, Clemens pitched 10.2 innings.
Start #3 - 8 innings pitched
Start #4 - 9 IP
Start #5 - 7 IP
Start #6 - 8 IP
Start #7 - 7 IP
You're welcome.
|
88.1387 | | MKFSA::LONG | HB Jessica! Sweet sixteen! | Fri May 13 1994 15:57 | 20 |
| Okay, Glenn, I called the local paper and here's the factoids:
start 1 4 2/3 **
2 6 **
3 8 +
4 9 +
5 7 +
6 8 +
7 6
8 7
** This doesn't impress me. Especially when you consider Opening
Day was a shelling.
+ This is much better and more in line with what you were talking
about, but, in my book anyway, it still doesn't make up for the first
two starts.
billl
|
88.1388 | 1992 was just fine, start to finish... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 16:01 | 15 |
|
> Clemens tailed off badly in the second half of the '92 season.
By the way, this "tailed off badly in the second half of the '92
season" is, as are most complaints about Clemens (or statements of
what he has or hasn't done without a fair comparison to all other
pitchers), an exaggeration. He lost his last three games and shut
it down for the last week of the season (one start). Near the
middle of September he was still rolling and even outdueled his
hero Nolan Ryan with a memorable shutout victory in Texas to win
his 18th game. I mean, you can't tail off too badly in the second
half of a season and still finish with a 2.41 ERA.
glenn
|
88.1389 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Fri May 13 1994 16:24 | 11 |
|
get real will ya Mac. Besides the 86 series the soxs have been in 2 other
league championship series as well and have probably finished in the top 3
of their division probably 4 or 5 other times. When the last time the Cubs
even finished 3 rd?
OK Glenn statisticwise I surrender to you but my personal opinion based on
playing in the tougher league, with a worst team, and with a few golden gloves
says Maddux is the best........
mike
|
88.1390 | An impossible standard... sorry, I'll take it every time | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 16:25 | 12 |
|
> + This is much better and more in line with what you were talking
> about, but, in my book anyway, it still doesn't make up for the first
> two starts.
So Clemens must pitch well and win in *more* than 4 games for every bad
one? A bleepin' 0.80 ERA in 7-2/3 IP starts since his first two games
doesn't make up for it?! I guess Roger'll be paying all season for
letting everyone down on Opening Day...
glenn
|
88.1391 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Fri May 13 1994 16:29 | 19 |
| I surely can't complain about Clemens, and I don't think there's a team
in the league that would refuse him.
Right now he's the only stable pitcher (excepting perhaps Sele) on the
roster.
I'd give my left nut and half my right one to have a closer with 1/5 the
talent of Clemens. Maybe then we wouldn't have to sit there and watch
that stiff Russell blow good hard work by the starters.
Clemens has had an impressive last month, and he did pitch well enough
in his second start to get the win, if the rest of the team hadn't
let him down.
I doubt there's a pitcher on the Pirates staff who comes close....8^)
'Saw
|
88.1392 | Cubs finished 1st in 1989, too... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 16:34 | 11 |
|
> OK Glenn statisticwise I surrender to you but my personal opinion based on
> playing in the tougher league, with a worst team, and with a few golden gloves
> says Maddux is the best........
You're forgetting that brutal beating the Philthies put on Maddux in
last year's NLCS, MikeC. Had that been Roger it would have provided
you with material for at least two months... ;-)
glenn
|
88.1393 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Brillant, Charming and Nasty | Fri May 13 1994 16:43 | 10 |
|
> You're forgetting that brutal beating the Philthies put on Maddux in
> last year's NLCS, MikeC. Had that been Roger it would have provided
> you with material for at least two months... ;-)
Cmon now Glenn, I've lighten up on Roger. I've seen the light so to speak.
Besides that's only 1 outing. It's been a long time since I've mentioned
the 9 run someone blew against the dreaded Yankees.... ;^)
|
88.1394 | | MKFSA::LONG | HB Jessica! Sweet sixteen! | Fri May 13 1994 16:49 | 14 |
| Hello McFly! Anybody home?!
Pay attention, Glenn. I said, in my opinion, he did not have an
"impressive" April. By the numbers I got he was good, but falls
short of "impressive" in my book.
>> So Clemens must pitch well and win in *more* than 4 games for every bad
>> one?
Ah, that's 'two' bad games.
billl
|
88.1395 | | MKFSA::LONG | HB Jessica! Sweet sixteen! | Fri May 13 1994 16:51 | 6 |
| >> I doubt there's a pitcher on the Pirates staff who comes close....8^)
Nope, not a one. But that wasn't the point.
billl
|
88.1396 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 13 1994 16:58 | 6 |
| � Pay attention, Glenn. I said, in my opinion, he did not have an
� "impressive" April. By the numbers I got he was good, but falls
� short of "impressive" in my book.
Take a look around the league, my friend. Those numbers are indeed
impressive if you subscribe to the lively ball theory.
|
88.1397 | A simple difference of opinion...I have been impressed, very | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 17:05 | 16 |
|
> Ah, that's 'two' bad games.
No need to be insulting, billl. I was paying attention. I just
disagree that it's a bad outing when a pitcher is going well, gets
into the 7th inning with a 4-2 lead (in just the 2nd outing of the
year), exits and sees his bullpen blow the lead. Basically that's
what you ask of a starter, and it's only a disappointment if you
are looking for the very best of Roger Clemens, every time out. I
have had absolutely no problems with the Roger Clemens I've seen in
every single outing since Opening Day. Again, we're talking about
a 1.41 ERA over those 7 out of 8 games (even with the one bullpen
failure).
glenn
|
88.1398 | An "outside" opinion | ANGLIN::WIERSBECK | Twins ERA=Enormous Runs Allowed | Fri May 13 1994 17:12 | 11 |
| I hate Clemens as much as anyone. But to listen to (some) Sox fans
just blows me away. Take a look at the Twins starting staff. Good
gawd, if they were only 1/2 as good as him, they'd be impressive in my
book.
Mr. Billll is living proof that some Sox fans are NEVER satisfied.
Maybe with good reason.
Spud
|
88.1399 | Here's one Clemens fan who appreciates him and then some... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 13 1994 18:26 | 20 |
|
> I hate Clemens as much as anyone.
Bite your tongue, Spud! ;-)
I make no apologies for my admiration of Clemens (but I do think I am
being fairly objective about his place in pitching history).
Guaranteed, I will make my very first Hall of Fame induction trip to
Cooperstown the weekend Roger goes in. I'll book the reservations the
day after he announces his retirement, or as early as they allow.
Basically, because he's the first HOFer I've gotten to see in person
over his entire career. I've probably attended close to 40% of
Clemens' home starts since 1986 (dammit, I didn't get the 20-K game--
not many did-- but there's no looking back), so I figure he's given me
this many thrills I might as well see it all the way through. It'll
definitely be one of those occasions where it's permissible to allow a
trace of a tear to form (but only in one eye!).
glenn
|
88.1400 | clemens/ one of the best ever!! | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Mon May 16 1994 07:48 | 13 |
| has there been a pitcher in the last ten years who has been as
consistent as clemens?? i don't think so...just because he had a bad
year which i do believe every pitcher in *history* has had no one can
say you can't appreciate a pitcher who has acomplished what roger has
acomplished. how much more can you ask for.?? i think most people who
say those things about roger are the ones who dislike him as a person,
but, his stats only prove his pitching ability. it was just like jim
rice, some people didn't like him as a person but you can't argue the
fact that his numbers were impressive. and you know what?? there both
future HOF's.
stig
|
88.1401 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Mon May 16 1994 10:01 | 12 |
| Did anyone catch the interview with Mo Vaughn last night during the
rain delay?
He was talking about how Mike Easler has him hitting: See, Read and
Explode. Neat interview...
Also like the Curt Gowdy piece on the 75 WS. Afterwards Fisk said that
it was like a dream, and he could hardly remember hitting that homer.
He said it was like someone else doing it...
'Saw
|
88.1402 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Home of the driveby noter... | Mon May 16 1994 10:50 | 2 |
| Great Sunday night game. Why didn't they a) have a backup or b) go
to the Ranger game?
|
88.1403 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Yes I Am !!! | Mon May 16 1994 10:54 | 7 |
|
Just to irk me even more, I'm watching Sportscenter and they tell
you its in OT between the 1st and 2nd OT. Along comes midnight and they
switch to ESPN2. Great, they'll show the end of the game. WRONG. They
started from the beginning of the freakin game.
Ron
|
88.1404 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Mon May 16 1994 11:03 | 12 |
| > Just to irk me even more, I'm watching Sportscenter and they tell
>you its in OT between the 1st and 2nd OT. Along comes midnight and they
>switch to ESPN2. Great, they'll show the end of the game. WRONG. They
>started from the beginning of the freakin game.
It had something to do with blackout restrictions and who had rights to
the game.
I was able to watch it on MSG, but ended up switching to T2 after a while...
'Saw
|
88.1406 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Mon May 16 1994 12:26 | 27 |
| >
> The Rangers/DEVILS game was on the french channel... don't know if you
> get that in your cable area, though.
>
I don't, but it is fairly easy to imitate:
First, turn down the sound on MSG.
Second, scan the SW dial on a boom box till you pull in
the french sound for the game.
Third, invite over a bunch of French-Canadian dry wall
installers, complete with stilts, drills, and lot and lots
of beer.
Fourth, sit back and watch the circus you've created....
It don't get any better....
'Saw
|
88.1407 | Spoken like a true whiney Sox fan | BALL4::KURAS | Still a chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Mon May 16 1994 12:57 | 10 |
| If the Red Sox miss the playoffs this year by 1 game, it will be ESPN's
fault. If ESPN had not scheduled the game to be televised, the Sox
would have played at 1PM on Sunday. And, they would have gotten the
game in before the rains came around 4:20 PM. The Sox had already
beaten the Jays on Fri. & Sat. Chances are they would have won again
on Sunday. The curse of the Bambino goes on...
many ;-)'s,
/joe
|
88.1408 | in my lifetime????? Nahhhhhhh ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Wed May 18 1994 10:23 | 13 |
|
Yabbut I'm not sure if'n it was part of the tee vee noos lasted
night or if I heard it on the radion but in regards to the (new)
Fenway Park design being considered, they're thinking about a
retractable roof which would still allow the game to be played on real
honest-to-goodness grass. In case of inclement weather, they'd
close it and then there wouldn't be a rain out!
I remain,
occasionally yer "Occasional ::Sprots Reporter"
Kev
|
88.1409 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed May 18 1994 10:26 | 1 |
| Why can't the Sox get guys like Lee Smith?
|
88.1410 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Wed May 18 1994 10:27 | 9 |
| >
> Why can't the Sox get guys like Lee Smith?
>
Yeah, I know. The guy is amazing!
I take it the Sox lost last night?
|
88.1411 | I always liked him!! | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Wed May 18 1994 10:30 | 4 |
| I could never figure out why they got rid of him having 30 saves that
year...but then again, where's Plantier??
stig
|
88.1412 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed May 18 1994 10:39 | 14 |
| 'Saw, the Sox lost 3-2 in a pitching duel between Mussina and Clemens.
Clemens hurt himself (figuratively speaking) in the 5th or so giving up
back to back walks, and committing a throwing error on a sac bunt. He
was able to get out of the inning only giving up 1 run (ensuing sac
fly) which allowed the Os to tie the game. He gave up a leadoff homer
to Baines the next inning to give the Os a 2-1 lead. Naehring got that
one back with a solo shot of his own. A couple of hits and a sac fly
in the 8th gave the Os the lead. Smith got the save (Sox stranded a
runner at 2nd in the ninth).
stig, the Sox supposedly traded Smith because he was a "problem in the
clubhouse". According to Sean McDonough, Oates handles this "problem"
by letting him do whatever the hell he wants as long as he continues to
deliver.
|
88.1413 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | PoliticallyCorrectScrabble | Wed May 18 1994 12:51 | 7 |
| As far as I know Boston was the only place where Lee Smith was
a "problem". The guy Boston got to replace the "problem" (i.e.
Jeff Reardon) was waived by the Yankees for complaining about how
he was being used. The guy who thought Lee Smith was a "problem"
now spends his time doing commercials for Suffolk Downs.
/Don
|
88.1414 | the fans loved him... | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Wed May 18 1994 13:25 | 4 |
| what I remember most about lee smith was the bowing down the fans use
to do...
stig
|
88.1415 | Don't know if it was justified but ... | DOCTP::TESSIER | | Wed May 18 1994 14:22 | 12 |
| Re.
> As far as I know Boston was the only place where Lee Smith was
> a "problem".
He had the same bad reputation in Chicago, which is why the Cubs were
so willing to give him up for virtually nothing -- Calvin Shiraldi.
The complaint was that he was fine if you used him only in save situations
and only in the ninth inning. But then isn't that what you do with a
closer anway?
Ken
|
88.1416 | | TNPUBS::ALVEY | Drive-by body-piercing | Thu May 19 1994 10:34 | 6 |
| Smith
Burks
Bagwell
Plantier
Next?
|
88.1417 | Yabbut Sele is Gawd!! | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Thu May 19 1994 10:48 | 1 |
|
|
88.1418 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Thu May 19 1994 11:32 | 11 |
| > -< Yabbut Sele is Gawd!! >-
I was driving home last night and I heard some of the game on the
radio. They kept talking about his curve in the 5th and 6th. They
called it a 12-to-6 curve. I'd give my left filbert to have seen it...
'Saw
|
88.1419 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 19 1994 11:36 | 3 |
| That curveball was a beauty to behold. You should have seen Cal
Ripken's knees buckle just before he was called out on strikes in the
ninth.
|
88.1420 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Thu May 19 1994 11:38 | 15 |
| >
> That curveball was a beauty to behold. You should have seen Cal
> Ripken's knees buckle just before he was called out on strikes in the
> ninth.
>
Too bad ol' Cal's knees didn't just give out....8^(
Nothing like a good curveball.... I love to hear that guy on the radio:
"WHAT A CURVE, that's swing and a miss, STRIKE THREE!"
'Saw
|
88.1421 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 19 1994 11:44 | 5 |
| �Too bad ol' Cal's knees didn't just give out....8^(
You're seeing history in the making, 'Saw. Records were made to be
broken. Be thankful you'll be able to tell the grandkids that you were
there instead of saying "I saw old Lou on the retouched newsreels".
|
88.1422 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Thu May 19 1994 11:57 | 7 |
| > there instead of saying "I saw old Lou on the retouched newsreels".
Hey, my Dad met Lou, and that will mean more to me than seeing Cal break
his record....
Cal couldn't carry Lou's jock....8^)
|
88.1423 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | TCM - World's Greatest Sandbagger | Thu May 19 1994 11:58 | 8 |
|
The guys on Sportcenter were calling Sele "The Kid With The Curve".
They showed him freezing a few O's in their tracks. As for Ripken,
him breaking Gehrig's record won't detract from Gehrig anymore than
Aaron breaking Ruth's record detracted from the Babe. As Mac says,
records are made to be broken. If anything, as Ripken draws closer
to the record we'll hear more about Gehrig and what an amazing feat
it is/was than we have in the past 40 years.
|
88.1424 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu May 19 1994 12:10 | 5 |
| right on tommie,
and cal took a mean fould off of the shin and was in pain for the
rest of the night so he might have appeared shakey
|
88.1425 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Thu May 19 1994 12:10 | 5 |
| > The guys on Sportcenter were calling Sele "The Kid With The Curve".
> They showed him freezing a few O's in their tracks. As for Ripken,
I wish I had a tape of that more than I wish I had the MP tape....
|
88.1426 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Home of the driveby noter... | Thu May 19 1994 14:28 | 2 |
| Because you can't get busted for being a girly-mon with that tape?
|
88.1427 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Thu May 19 1994 15:04 | 13 |
| >
> Because you can't get busted for being a girly-mon with that tape?
>
Nope, because to hear the Sox announcer describe it on the radio, it
was like an F-14 taking a power dive over the Gulf.
Fastballs are cool and manly things, but curveballs are like a fox, all sly
and deceptive...
'Saw
|
88.1428 | By the way how did they score the saftey on Friday night??? | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Mon May 23 1994 09:30 | 17 |
|
Sense the Sox notesfile is write-locked....
Glenn....
I'm not condeming Greenwell for always swinging at the first pitch.
I have been a Greenwell supporter and will continue but... comming of
the bench and facing a new pithcer who he has not seen in at least a
year warrants taking at least one pitch. I know Greenwell has a great
ave at swinging at the first pitch but in that situation I say you must
take a strike. You can agree or disagree but say he takes that first
pitch (your right he did hit it hard) and say the next pitch is a
hanging slider Sox win Sox win....I just think you have to take at
least one strike comming off the bench.
Jerry
|
88.1429 | | MKFSA::LONG | Deeper than the holler, stronger than the river... | Mon May 23 1994 09:44 | 16 |
| re .1428:
>> AD::HEATH "Have pitchers and catchers reported yet?"
Jerry, don't you think it's time to update this?
Saw most of Sunday's 9-2 win. Clemens looked strong, but seemed
to have problems with location about the 5th or 6th.
Saw Mo's and Dawson's homers. Did those things get out in a hurry,
or what?!
billl
|
88.1430 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Mon May 23 1994 09:54 | 20 |
| A few thoughts:
Greenwell's having a HoF season this year, eh?
Friday night's game was a laugher.
re baseball in general:
I cannot believe how low the umps have made the strike zone.
I was watching a reliever from Seattle last night (Tim Nelson
I think) and he had a couple of pitches across the letters
over the plate that were called balls.
IMO, that kind of sucks. I guess it is consistent, but it
just bugs me that the strike zone has gotten so tiny....
'Saw
|
88.1431 | too much sqeezzzinnn goin on... | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Mon May 23 1994 10:24 | 8 |
| cant agree more... i'm getting real sick and tired of seeing rog
squeezzzzed so much. maybe i'm crazy, but a lot of his pitches look
like strikes and yet they call them balls..and then you see the
opposing pitcher getting the strike calls. i guess he'll never ever
ever ever beat his strike out record. does anyone know who the ump was
behind the plate for his strike out record day??? good trivia ???
stig
|
88.1432 | | CSC32::M_MACGREGOR | | Mon May 23 1994 10:42 | 8 |
|
Maybe I'm just confused, but I thought that the strike zone that
included the letters was for little league, and that the MLB one was
from the knees to the just over the belt line (oh and BTW, college is
halfway between the two)
Marc
|
88.1433 | Boy I haven't heard ole Clem getting squeezed in a while hahahaha | CNTROL::CHILDS | I got them GhostTown Blues | Mon May 23 1994 10:50 | 9 |
|
Here's another good one from a Clemens' apologist as big as our own G.W.
Billy Ballou cited the list of pitchers that Clemens has faced this year
and BLAM(tm) for his record not being perfect........
While I'll conceed that he has faced alot of top dogs from other clubs
isn't the top dog supposed to be better than the others????????
mike
|
88.1434 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Mon May 23 1994 11:01 | 11 |
| re the strike zone:
Unless it has been changed in the last year or so, the strike
zone is defined as armpits (it was changed from shoulders)
to knees, over the plate.
It has never, to my knowledge been defined as the belt line,
however, in practice, that's where it's delineated.....
'Saw
|
88.1435 | | MKFSA::LONG | Deeper than the holler, stronger than the river... | Mon May 23 1994 11:07 | 10 |
| 'Saw's right on. The strike zone 'in the rule book' goes from the
armpits to the knees. The one enforced is from the belt to the
knees.
It's kinda like the second baseman, or shortstop, having to touch
second on a double play. Rule book says 'Yes', but merely 'in the
vicinity' is enforced.
billl
|
88.1436 | Greenwell will pick up some of the slack, when needed... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 23 1994 11:09 | 31 |
|
> You can agree or disagree but say he takes that first
> pitch (your right he did hit it hard) and say the next pitch is a
> hanging slider Sox win Sox win....I just think you have to take at
> least one strike comming off the bench.
Since that pitch was clearly strike one, I'd say the chances that
Greenwell would have ever seen the hanging slider against the lefty are
slim. There wasn't that much trickery there from an unfamiliar pitcher,
either; it looked like the standard first-pitch fastball in the hitting
zone. I don't really care which approach Greenwell ultimately decided
to take, but I was just pointing out that he's not the great 2-strike
hitter in the Wade Boggs mold and that wasn't a game situation (2 outs,
insurance run in scoring position; the Sox did win, anyway!) where
1st-pitch swinging is to be condemned. It just wasn't that big a deal,
imo.
Greenwell will rise again and provide valuable production when others
slump (Cooper for one seems to be headed in that direction; that's
alright, he couldn't keep up the early pace forever). Greenwell did so
in April, but had a terrible late April/May. I'm not worried about
him; the Red Sox need Greenwell to hit and barring the major injury he
will hit. For damned sure, I'm not going to gloat about a guy we badly
need falling on his face for a stretch, as seems to be the tendency in
some bitter, cynical circles (you know who you are! ;-) because there
is no one else to fill that hitting void in the short term. We've
gotta have it from Mikey, so I can't see rooting against the proven
hitter in the midst of a very interesting and successful (27-15) run...
glenn
|
88.1437 | Geez, MikeC, I figured you'd at least wait for a clunker ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 23 1994 11:22 | 13 |
|
> While I'll conceed that he has faced alot of top dogs from other clubs
> isn't the top dog supposed to be better than the others????????
There's the small matter of what the other 9 guys on the field do. I
was out of town and unfortunately missed the classic Clemens-Mussina
matchup, but from what I heard and read in the national media Clemens
pitched every bit as well as Mussina did. Someone still has to lose.
That second loss leaves Clem at 5-2, 2.51, leading the league in Ks by
a comfortable margin. String him up!
glenn
|
88.1438 | Greenwell is washed up.... | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Mon May 23 1994 11:49 | 15 |
| Glenn, you can defend Greenwell all you want, but his stats, (those
sacred numbers everyone in here lives by) show him to be having a HoS
year this year.
He couldn't carry Mo Vaughn's jock on one of Mo's bad days, and Mo is
finally in the 3rd slot where he belongs. Put Greenteef back down around
6 or 7 where he belongs..... If he starts producing, fine, I won't complain,
but I think this is wonderful poetic justice for Mr I'm Worth 5 Mil.....
Too bad no one hit for Finnvold the other night.... Sounds like he
pitched a helluva game....
'Saw
|
88.1439 | You won't complain? Promise?! ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 23 1994 12:04 | 25 |
|
> Glenn, you can defend Greenwell all you want, but his stats, (those
> sacred numbers everyone in here lives by) show him to be having a HoS
> year this year.
The "sacred numbers" show him to be on a 27-HR, 95-RBI pace (which even
I doubt he'll reach, but just to put this "HoS" season in perspective).
I'm not satisfied with his overall production, but he gets a few hits
over the next week or so to put his average in a respectable region and
all of a sudden he's having a decent year. It's early, but like I said,
Greenwell flat won a couple ballgames in April for the Sox with a
surprising outburst of power, and I expect him to contribute again.
> He couldn't carry Mo Vaughn's jock on one of Mo's bad days, and Mo is
> finally in the 3rd slot where he belongs. Put Greenteef back down around
> 6 or 7 where he belongs..... If he starts producing, fine, I won't complain,
> but I think this is wonderful poetic justice for Mr I'm Worth 5 Mil.....
Well, that's a compelling argument, since no other everyday player on
the team can carry Mo's jock, either. What wonderful poetic justice
that the rest of the team can't match up with one of the emerging young
stars in all of baseball. No wonder the Sox aren't in first place.
glenn
|
88.1440 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Mon May 23 1994 12:15 | 37 |
| > The "sacred numbers" show him to be on a 27-HR, 95-RBI pace (which even
> I doubt he'll reach, but just to put this "HoS" season in perspective).
That's IF he hits.
> I'm not satisfied with his overall production, but he gets a few hits
> over the next week or so to put his average in a respectable region and
> all of a sudden he's having a decent year. It's early, but like I said,
If wishes were horses, beggars would ride...
As to his April heroics, April is ancient history. This is a
what have you done for me lately game.....
> Well, that's a compelling argument, since no other everyday player on
> the team can carry Mo's jock, either. What wonderful poetic justice
> that the rest of the team can't match up with one of the emerging young
> stars in all of baseball. No wonder the Sox aren't in first place.
Yabbut, at least the rest of them have been getting it done... I mean,
Dawson is coming in on those old knees and cranking them.... Greenwell
should be lucky he don't have knees and joints like that 8^). On them
stud legs he should be batting .350 with 20 hrs right now....
He cain't field, and if you cain't field, you at least got to hit the ball.
He ain't hitting the ball, so what good is he? When he starts hitting,
instead of striking out in the clutch and stuff like that, well, I'll
have to find something else to complain about..8^)
'Saw
|
88.1441 | Who cares as long as there hitting-change the lineup | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Mon May 23 1994 12:38 | 7 |
| I believe Greenwell should be dropped dowm in the lineup and replaced
with Naering. Until he starts hitting again! The best hitters should be
placed in the heart of the lineup. Lets face it, Greenwell isn't one of
the best hitters right now. You can only make the lineup stronger by
doing this...
stig
|
88.1442 | I'm not running him down just a differnce of statagey I quess | AD::HEATH | Have pitchers and catchers reported yet? | Mon May 23 1994 12:43 | 10 |
|
Glenn...
I don't doubt that Greenwell will produce. He is a lifetime .300
hitter and after 162 games will be at or reasonably close to that no
doubt. But I still think he should have taken at least one. That part
about the hanging slider was a joke, one of those woulda coulda deals.
Jerry
|
88.1443 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | I got them GhostTown Blues | Mon May 23 1994 13:30 | 8 |
|
but Glenn, I couldn't wait until august to share the report....
;^)
especially after ::Stig complained about Roger's strikezone....
mike
|
88.1444 | strikezone??whats that?? | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Tue May 24 1994 07:08 | 4 |
| and rog still has a 1.18 era in the last 8-9 games. just complaining...
ya know..rogs' strikezone is no more...
stig
|
88.1445 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Yes I Am !!! | Tue May 24 1994 09:51 | 15 |
|
ESPN had a little tidbit about pitch count per inning a couple of
nights ago. Greg Maddux and David Cone were low at like 12 pitches and
Roger ranked up around 70th with almost 17 pitches per inning.
Maddux and Cone think the strike out is over-rated. If you have
movement on your fastball especially downward. Throw the ball over the
middle of the plate and let them hit hit, especially the first and second
pitches. MOST of the time you get a ground out or harmless fly ball, or
you get ahead in the count.
An example they used was that on Sunday Maddux pitched a complete
game only throwing 89 pitches. He also had 9 strikeouts, he got all 9 to
end an inning. Clemens is up around 90 pitches in the 6th or 7th. Every
pitchers arm gets tired after 90 pitches.
Ron
|
88.1446 | | CAMONE::WAY | Un-filtered Camels, Raw Beef, Coffee | Tue May 24 1994 10:06 | 1 |
| This "new" strike zone is a bitch though if you have a rising fastball....
|
88.1447 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Tue May 24 1994 10:33 | 3 |
| |This "new" strike zone is a bitch though if you have a rising fastball....
Yabut the high fastball is a big "swing and miss" pitch for a lot of batters.
|
88.1448 | Soon to be appearing... | KALI::MORGAN | | Tue May 24 1994 10:38 | 7 |
| Watched the PawSox last night against Syracuse. I predict that Tim
Vanegmond will be with the team before the end of July. He's too good
to leave down there. He's got a good fastball, curve and it also looks
like he's working on a screwball which he uses as a changeup. Hope he
doesn't mess his arm up trying to throw screwballs though.
Steve
|
88.1449 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Let me see shake yo tailfeather... | Tue May 24 1994 10:38 | 4 |
| I think it's Park effects...
-Dan
|
88.1450 | Vanegmond in '95 | BALL4::KURAS | Still a chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Tue May 24 1994 11:18 | 10 |
| I'd have to disagree with the "park effect" argument. McCoy is much
more of a hitter's park than Beehive Field in New Britain. And, so
far, Vanegmond is having a much better year in AAA/McCoy than he did
last year at this time in AA/Beehive.
Of course the talent behind him on the field is much better too, but he
is getting the job done. I wouldn't be surprised though if they held
him back until nexted year.
/joe
|
88.1451 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Tue May 24 1994 14:55 | 3 |
| Is it the PawSox that have the blind play-by-play announcer? He was
just interviewed on the local version of WFAN, but I didn't catch it
all.
|
88.1452 | Beehive field anyway | AD::HEATH | This is it.. the end of the curse. Sox '94 champs | Tue May 24 1994 14:58 | 6 |
|
No its their AA team in Conn. I'm having a bad day but I'm sure its
New Britian.
Jerry
|
88.1453 | | CAMONE::WAY | Bleaume | Tue May 24 1994 15:02 | 12 |
| > No its their AA team in Conn. I'm having a bad day but I'm sure its
> New Britian.
Yes, it is New Britain.
He's actually the color man, I believe. His partner (and they ARE partners)
is the play-by-play announcer. They work as a team, and from the blurbs
I've seen on the news (I rarely can catch the games on the radio)
they seem to be quite good....
'Saw
|
88.1454 | | MKFSA::LONG | Honest as a Robin on a springtime window sill... | Wed May 25 1994 09:37 | 11 |
| Red Sox designated hitter Andre Dawson, who has had nine knee
operations, hurt his left knee while running out a grounder Tuesday
night and will have X-rays or an MRI to determine the extent of the
injury.
Watching Dawson run before this happened was almost as ludicrous
as watching Buckner field grounders. What's next, Designated
Runners?
billl
|
88.1455 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Wed May 25 1994 09:52 | 3 |
| Yea, Dawson is an absolute case-in-point for what the DH does. There is no way
he could excell in fielding his position, but he can still hit, so he is still
in the bigs.
|
88.1456 | I'm roaring!!! | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Wed May 25 1994 10:23 | 3 |
| re .1454
|
88.1457 | Lucas & Wardlow | BALL4::KURAS | Still a chippy & cheerful Sox fan | Wed May 25 1994 10:54 | 27 |
| The radio announcer team for the New Britain Red Sox is Jim Lucas & Don
Wardlow. Wardlow was blind at birth. They went to college together,
and it was Wardlow who approached Lucas about the prospects of teaming
up together.
They broadcast games for the Miami Miracles in '92. The team was own
by Mike Veeck, son of the legendary Bill "as in Wreck" Veeck. He gave
them a standing offer to return in '93, but also encouraged them to try
to climb the ladder & seek employment at a higher level of minor league
ball.
Although employed by the New Britain Red Sox, their salaries are on a
commission basis. They bought the air rights to Brit Sox games for one
dollar. Their salary comes out of the advertising fees they can
solicit from sponsors on the air.
Wardlow usually provides the color commentary. He'll refer to his
Braille cards to provide background info on the ballplayers. Lucas
also assists in any pregam prep. Wardlow also leads the Beehive
faithfull in "Take Me Out To The Ballgame" during the 7th inning
stretch.
And, on occasion, Wardlow actually does play-by-play. He'll pick up
the broadcast in his headset, from his partner, and repeat what Lucas
tells him, with his own bit of ad libbing.
/joe
|
88.1458 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 25 1994 10:57 | 6 |
|
I believe that Wardlow recently did one game for the Florida Marlins,
another first at the major-league level...
glenn
|
88.1459 | Wardlow has to be better than mcdonough(sight unseen) | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed May 25 1994 11:30 | 1 |
|
|
88.1460 | Memory of the Ninj...oh yeah, Cleveland's pitching/defense sucks | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 27 1994 14:04 | 14 |
|
Bizarre, surreal flashback from last night's game at Fenway. In the
first or second inning my friend aggressively seeks out and destroys a
beachball (in the boxes, no less) against his chest, Ninj-style. He
tosses it behind him in the aisle and an usher or someone picks it up.
Hours later, in about the 7th inning, some kid comes back with it, pen
in hand, and asks to have it autographed. "No fake names", he demands
(maybe he was looking for a defendant for a lawsuit charging emotional
damages, I don't know). So my buddy says okay, absolutely, signs the
ball "Raul Mondesi", the kid looks at it and trots away with a big
smile on his face...
glenn
|
88.1461 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Fri May 27 1994 14:15 | 12 |
|
I was in the Sky boxes last night and yup them Sox fans showed an
awful lot of class in the 8th.
Sandy Alomar was behind the plate well Farr bounces a ball into
his Nads. Well all the GREAT fans behind home got all over him cheering
and everything. On the next pitch he got hit in the arm, again the same
GREAT response from those gracious Sox fans!!!
Chappy
|
88.1462 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | AndNowTheEndIsNear... | Fri May 27 1994 14:42 | 4 |
| Definitely worse than fans running on the field and changing
the outcome of a game. Definitely much much worse...
/Don
|
88.1463 | I was there; I done seen ity(I ducked) | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Fri May 27 1994 15:03 | 8 |
| C'mon Chappy willya!!??
Fer cry-eye, the cheering wasn''t that bad, and hey, all fans is
perverse. At least no one in Fenway gits a beer shower like they do
in rightfield in Yankee Stadium..
MikeL
|
88.1464 | Musta been a Penn St grad..8^) | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Fri May 27 1994 15:06 | 8 |
| Best play of the night:
The fan reaching up in the runway for a foul ball and knocking
some old female fan right on her labanza..and he wouldn't give
her the dadgum ball.
MikeL
|
88.1465 | Quitcher cryin', willya Chap... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 27 1994 15:31 | 11 |
|
> Definitely worse than fans running on the field and changing
> the outcome of a game. Definitely much much worse...
...or taunting Scott Taylor about his looks with chants of "Opie!
Opie!"
;-)
glenn
|
88.1466 | mMMMM Golden showers in da Bronx | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Fri May 27 1994 16:40 | 12 |
|
Oh I know fans in NY are bad just recording it for the SPORTS record
that the fans did act up at CATHEDRAL FENWAY!!!
Chap
P.S What happened to Opie, Do ya think I ruined his career?
|
88.1467 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | Yankees are an embarassment-GeorgeK | Fri May 27 1994 17:27 | 7 |
| > -< mMMMM Golden showers in da Bronx >-
Chappy, leave your perverse sexual practices out of here. And quit
whining about nothing, while you're at it.
brews
|
88.1468 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Tue May 31 1994 10:24 | 10 |
|
I'm not whining about nothing Brews, I'm just sick of everytime
something a fan does something in NY it's scrutinized. But when a
freakin Yuppie at a Red Sox game does something it's not even mentioned
in here?
Chappy
|
88.1469 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas Poor baldric | Tue May 31 1994 10:29 | 20 |
| Boy Chappy, life must be getting pretty boring for ya.....
Now, to some real business:
I haven't seen the Sox play lately, but I've been perusing
the box scores.
Since I'm the first one to get all over Mike Greenwell when
he does something that sucks, I'll be the first to say
that, from the box scores at least, it looks like he's picking
up and generating some offense.
In Friday and Saturday's boxes, it looked like he did well
at the plate and drove in some important runs.
Kudos to Mike Greenwell.....
'Saw
|
88.1470 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue May 31 1994 10:40 | 2 |
| "Saw, in that last game against Cleveland, Greenwell even had an
outfield assist, cutting down a runner at the plate.
|
88.1471 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas Poor baldric | Tue May 31 1994 10:47 | 7 |
| > "Saw, in that last game against Cleveland, Greenwell even had an
> outfield assist, cutting down a runner at the plate.
Wow.
Be still my heart....
|
88.1472 | Yabbut he really was safe Mac..8^) | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Tue May 31 1994 10:58 | 1 |
|
|
88.1473 | Yes, Greenwell had a pretty fair weekend for himself... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue May 31 1994 10:59 | 21 |
|
Greenwell had another one yesterday, too, a *great* read, barehand catch
and throw off The Wall for a perfect strike to second to nail Wally
World Joyner in a very close play at second. For that one play at
least, he really did look like Yaz. Greenwell has always had the
accuracy with the throwing arm, and now he's starting to get his
(average) arm strength back.
I marked four superb fielding plays by the Sox in my scorecard
yesterday, the prettiest of all perhaps being Carlos Rodriguez'
spinning 360-degree turn of a critical DP to get the Sox out of big
trouble in the 5th. Some of that motion might have been superfluous,
but man, does this kid Rodriguez have a flair about him. Thanks for
the high-quality backup shortstop, Yankees...
The Red Sox are really giving the fans their money's worth in their
games at Fenway this year, at the very least. Yesterday's comeback
was a beaut...
glenn
|
88.1474 | Would work for me....but I'm not on the hook for 1.2 mil | AD::HEATH | This is it.. the end of the curse. Sox '94 champs | Tue May 31 1994 12:30 | 14 |
|
I wouldn't call Rodriquez a back up shortstop yet. The way he has
been playing when Valentin comes back do you sit Rodriquez, send him
down or take the "if it ain't broke don't fix it" approch. Rodriquez
has been outstanding in the field and much better than expected at the
dish. He is a better "shortstop" than Valentin (he makes all the
routine plays and doesn't try to turn them into highlight flim
material), a switch hitter who makes consistant contact and seems to
know how to play. I can't see them sending him to to Pawtucket but
to keep him would take a roster move. Can you say see ya' to Dave
Valle????
Jerry
|
88.1475 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | TCM - World's Greatest Sandbagger | Tue May 31 1994 12:46 | 6 |
|
Nice Bob Ryan article today about 'Saw's whupping boy, Mike
Greenwell. Among other things Ryan lauds Greenwell's willing-
ness to play hurt, his rah-rah attitude in the clubhouse and
he points out that Greenwell is starting to heat up at the plate
as his injuries heal.
|
88.1476 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas poor baldric | Tue May 31 1994 12:58 | 12 |
| > Nice Bob Ryan article today about 'Saw's whupping boy, Mike
> Greenwell. Among other things Ryan lauds Greenwell's willing-
> ness to play hurt, his rah-rah attitude in the clubhouse and
> he points out that Greenwell is starting to heat up at the plate
> as his injuries heal.
Gee, I pointed those same things out in here......
Hey, if Greenwell's bat gets hot, more power to the club.
|
88.1477 | exx | MSBCS::BRYDIE | TCM - World's Greatest Sandbagger | Tue May 31 1994 13:00 | 5 |
|
>> Gee, I pointed those same things out in here......
Really?
|
88.1478 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas poor baldric | Tue May 31 1994 13:03 | 16 |
| | >> Gee, I pointed those same things out in here......
|
| Really?
Yeah, I got in here this morning and said that, although I hadn't
seen any games I'd been watching the box scores over the past few
days (friday and saturday's paper specifically) and said that it
seemed that Greenwell was coming out of his slump and was starting
to produce (some good BA in those boxes) and some crucial RBIs.
I said I give credit where credit is due, and if I bash the guy when
he does poorly, I can give him credit when he does well.....
'Saw
|
88.1479 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | TCM - World's Greatest Sandbagger | Tue May 31 1994 15:44 | 5 |
|
That don;t exactl;y sound like "those same things". And don't
be backpedaling there 'Saw or we'll have to lump you in with
that faux-Sox fan, JD and his little buddy TCS, Sandbagger cum
laude.
|
88.1480 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas poor baldric | Tue May 31 1994 17:37 | 20 |
| > That don;t exactl;y sound like "those same things". And don't
> be backpedaling there 'Saw or we'll have to lump you in with
> that faux-Sox fan, JD and his little buddy TCS, Sandbagger cum
> laude.
Well, I didn't use those exact same words (because if I had I could've
sued Ryan for plagerism I suppose) but the essential meaning was there.
Seems both his article and my reply were remarking about Greenwell's
improved performance.
I don't backpedal -- was it Patton who said "there's no such thing
as retreat?"
As to lumping me in with the sandbaggers, you can't mix apples and
oranges......
'Saw
|
88.1481 | Trade | STRATA::GARRY | Dallas Cowboys back where they belong #1 | Wed Jun 01 1994 07:15 | 8 |
| I heard this morning the Red Sox traded for that power hitting right
handed batter,they traded Quantrill and Hatcher to Philly for Wes
Chamberlain and a minor league pitcher,real power hitter Wes is 2 HR's
and 6 RBI's and a .275 avg.I thought Gorman wasn't involved anymore.
Tom
|
88.1482 | maybe he has speed?? gorman wouldn't be involved then | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Wed Jun 01 1994 07:29 | 4 |
| was chamberlain playing regularly?? with those numbers I hope not...
stig
|
88.1483 | Was he hurt/disabled list or something | AD::HEATH | This is it.. the end of the curse. Sox '94 champs | Wed Jun 01 1994 08:25 | 11 |
|
If I remember right Chamberlain was semi platooning with Jim
Eisenrich in right field. We'll have to wait for Glen to get
in to get the skinny but I remember Chamberlain as having pretty
good wheels, above average power and will hit .280 range. He is
definitely a huge improvement over Hatcher in right field. The
problem I've got is why Quantrill. He is alot to give up for
someone that was not playing everyday.
Jerry
|
88.1484 | Not exactly a "break-through" deal ... | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Wed Jun 01 1994 09:36 | 7 |
| If Wes Chamberlain is a "huge" improvement over whatcha got in RF, you
got problems.
'Nuf said.
- ACC Chris
|
88.1485 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas poor baldric | Wed Jun 01 1994 09:52 | 10 |
| Sports Center last night panned the deal for the Sox. I forget their
exact description of Chamberlain, but I remember it amounted to
"He ain't worth much".
'Nother DUMB deal -- not that Quantrill was any great shakes either....
Seemed pretty inconsistent to me....
'Saw
|
88.1486 | We'll see!! | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Wed Jun 01 1994 10:14 | 7 |
| time will tell how good of a deal it was. since chamberlain has been
platooning for the most part we can bet that they'll have him start
as an everyday player to see how he'll do. he's not that good
defensively except that he has a "canon" for an arm. something I
believe a RF'er should have.
stig
|
88.1487 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas poor baldric | Wed Jun 01 1994 10:28 | 9 |
| > defensively except that he has a "canon" for an arm. something I
> believe a RF'er should have.
Agreed.
I remember a time when very few baserunners would try to stretch it
from 1st to 3rd on Evans arm.....
Well, let's see if this guy is a stiff or not....
|
88.1488 | He'll have to take to Fenway for this to work... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 01 1994 10:41 | 16 |
|
I'm not thrilled at all with giving up a quality young arm like
Quantrill. Quantrill might have come around, he might not have, but
he didn't seem to be the kind of player you'd want to give up in a
"risk" deal. I have little doubt but that the Phillies were just happy
to be rid of Chamberlain. Chamberlain at 28 could easily mature and hit
25 HRs playing everyday in Fenway, but no, he isn't a basestealer or
anything, is shaky with the glove, and is a free-swinging big-whiff
type who doesn't get on base at even an average rate and who has had
major troubles with RH pitching (I can already envision the lunging
strikeouts on balls a foot outside). So basically, what the guy does
for HRs with the tremendous strength he possesses is where it starts
and ends.
glenn
|
88.1489 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas poor baldric | Wed Jun 01 1994 10:57 | 18 |
| > type who doesn't get on base at even an average rate and who has had
> major troubles with RH pitching (I can already envision the lunging
> strikeouts on balls a foot outside). So basically, what the guy does
> for HRs with the tremendous strength he possesses is where it starts
> and ends.
So, (and I say this totally tongue in cheek) this is a guy who'll make
Greenwell look like HoF material?
The ONLY thing I can think of when I think of how whacky this deal appears,
is that Douquette comes from the NL. Maybe, just maybe he knows something
we don't.....
'Saw
|
88.1490 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Wed Jun 01 1994 11:19 | 7 |
|
Good trade Sox! Get rid of your best Middle reliever for a
strikeout waiting to happen?
Chap
|
88.1491 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Jun 01 1994 11:56 | 4 |
| Quantrill should have been taking Hesketh's spot in the starting
rotation.
Fossas has been called up to take Hatcher's roster spot.
|
88.1492 | This could get ugly... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 01 1994 12:13 | 11 |
|
> Fossas has been called up to take Hatcher's roster spot.
Great. Now we have two ineffective LH relievers to go along with an
ineffective LH starter. I was hoping someone with some history of
success at Pawtucket, like Cory Bailey, would be called up to fill
Quantrill's set-up role. The other four starters better hitch up their
belts...
glenn
|
88.1493 | Fossas again? Criminy | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Wed Jun 01 1994 12:17 | 5 |
| Gotsta be the GM spot glenn. The LouGormam curse. Step into that
role and get stoopid..
MikeL
|
88.1494 | I can't believe 'saw let this one slip(while >>ing it) | AKOCOA::BREEN | Turn down the lights, the parties over | Wed Jun 01 1994 12:19 | 10 |
| well if he has a "canon" for an arm perhaps he has the power of a papal
bull at the plate.
I like the trade if this guys defense pans out. Hatcher was a disaster
in center and a disappointment in right.
Andelman was panning hobson for not putting in a defensive replacement
for greenwell in late innings but the irony is that greenwell is the
defensive replacement - the best hobson's got in left field. But he
hasn't "improved" 'saw just a few bandwagoneers opening their eyes.
|
88.1495 | Judgement is still out on the trade...gotta trust Dan on this one | AD::HEATH | This is it.. the end of the curse. Sox '94 champs | Wed Jun 01 1994 12:42 | 23 |
|
Does anybody know the story on the pitcher (AA I think) that was
thrown in. On the surface I don't think it is a good trade for the
Sox but I'm hopin that Dan knows what he is doing. If the pitcher is
the next comming of Roger it works for me, but if he is a career minor
leauger gotta think the Sox got taken on this one. I can't believe
they called up Fossas what a joke. After the way Smokin Joe has been
going how long will it be before Vanegmond is called up?
We've watched the Butcher for 2+ years now and I can't remember him
ever taking such a beating on the Radio (not that it is unwarrented
mind you). On Andelman's show yesterday they where discussing if Sean
is to critical of the Sox blah blah blah and then did a segway into the
sports calender for last night and led off with "Despite Butch Hobson
the Red Sox take the 2nd best record in baseball...." the only good
thing they said about him is that he wasn't a drunk. He has been
slammed before but does anyone ever think it was this bad?
Jerry
ps Any word from Carfardo on Hobson contract extension??
|
88.1496 | Just goes to show that Anvilhead should stick to Chinese food... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 01 1994 12:43 | 13 |
|
> Andelman was panning hobson for not putting in a defensive replacement
> for greenwell in late innings but the irony is that greenwell is the
> defensive replacement - the best hobson's got in left field.
Yeah, last night in fill-in duty Tomberlin let one line drive get over
his head that Greenwell no doubt would have been pilloried for, then
completely butchered a ball in the corner in the 9th to let an important
insurance run score. Tomberlame and Chambermaid on the OF corners; what
a combo. Heads up Otis!
glenn
|
88.1497 | Hanging on for that eternal dream of having a cup of coffee | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 01 1994 13:39 | 13 |
|
> Does anybody know the story on the pitcher (AA I think) that was
> thrown in. On the surface I don't think it is a good trade for the
> Sox but I'm hopin that Dan knows what he is doing. If the pitcher is
> the next comming of Roger it works for me, but if he is a career minor
> leauger gotta think the Sox got taken on this one.
The pitcher, Mike Sullivan, is what the crusty old scouts would call a
"no prospect". A 26-year-old career minor-league relief pitcher
without a fastball. A Nate Minchey without the durability...
glenn
|
88.1498 | Doesn't look good today. Quantrill was way to much | AD::HEATH | This is it.. the end of the curse. Sox '94 champs | Wed Jun 01 1994 14:47 | 7 |
|
re -.1
Thanks Glen...Trade sucks
Jerry
|
88.1499 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas poor baldric | Wed Jun 01 1994 17:18 | 10 |
| I caught "canon" but didn't have the time nor the inclination to
say anything about it.
Still a little out of it from yesterday......
Plus, the "speling" in this file has gone down the "shiter" anyway,
so what's the difference?
'Saw
|
88.1500 | canon,waffles and docs | AKOCOA::BREEN | Turn down the lights, the parties over | Wed Jun 01 1994 17:43 | 13 |
| "canon" is spanish for canyon also if I'm not mistaken. "yesterday" is
that the memorial day festivities?
I thought you were going to pounce on canon like tommy pounced on you
for waffling about your greenwell opinion
since I'm here... Is doc 00:00 from baltimore? I heard this voice
which sounded a lot like the voice I heard at the ground round on dale
arnold the other day saying "I'm not a redsox fan, I'm from balt. and
an orioles fan but....
that guy doc would out jimmie myers jimmy myers as a sports talk night
guy.
|
88.1501 | It'd be my pleasure to oblige, actually | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 01 1994 18:23 | 14 |
|
Doc is not from Baltimore as far as I know but it's entirely possible
that he's now an Orioles' fan...
> that guy doc would out jimmie myers jimmy myers as a sports talk night
> guy.
...and he's promised me that he'll make me the first guest host on his
much talked-about radio show in his new broadcasting career, in order
to provide the totally unbiased opposing viewpoint. He thinks it's
because I'll be "honest" about the Celtics... ;-)
glenn
|
88.1502 | 'Saw, this one's for you | MSE1::FRANCUS | Rangers,Knicks,Mets in '94 | Sun Jun 05 1994 16:50 | 7 |
|
It finally makes sense why the Red Sox traded for Wes Chamberlain:
to make Mike Greenwell look good.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1503 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas poor baldric | Mon Jun 06 1994 10:10 | 9 |
| > It finally makes sense why the Red Sox traded for Wes Chamberlain:
>
> to make Mike Greenwell look good.
>
> The Crazy Met
8^) 8^) 8^) 8^) 8^)
|
88.1504 | Thought it was gonna be another great Sunday Fenway comeback... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 06 1994 10:12 | 13 |
|
> It finally makes sense why the Red Sox traded for Wes Chamberlain:
Chamberlain "should have" been the hero yesterday, had Mo Vaughn not
botched a foul pop-up in the 9th, had Dave Valle received proper
instruction on squeezing third strikes, had Jeff Russell never been
born. Wes' defensive foibles come as no surprise to me, but he really
has hit the ball so far, which is why the Sox went after him. Still
don't think the deal makes a whole lot of sense, but it may avert
disaster status just yet...
glenn
|
88.1505 | Should have held that comment for at least 3 days... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 06 1994 10:19 | 6 |
|
And oh yeah, whoever made that crack about "the problem with the
Rangers" regarding Jose Canseco, thanks a lot... ;-)
glenn
|
88.1506 | | CAMONE::WAY | Alas poor baldric | Mon Jun 06 1994 10:26 | 5 |
| The guy on CNN Headline Sports on the radio said it best yesterday:
Canseco posted slow-pitch softball numbers over the
weekend.....
|
88.1507 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Let me see shake yo tailfeather... | Thu Jun 09 1994 10:12 | 4 |
| Clemens on BCN this morning said he's not sure if he's pitching
Sunday or Monday because "moves are being made". When asked if
Pawsox or trade based, he said "probably both".
|
88.1508 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Thu Jun 09 1994 10:20 | 12 |
| | Clemens on BCN this morning said he's not sure if he's pitching
| Sunday or Monday because "moves are being made". When asked if
| Pawsox or trade based, he said "probably both".
Today's newspaper said that Clemens will be pushed back to Monday, and that
Nate "the Great" Minchey will be called up from Pawtuckett to start Sunday's
game. Minchey will then take Hesketh's place int he rotation.
Minchey wasn't bad lasted year in his first few games. Maybe he can win a
couple before the league makes book on him.
=Bob=
|
88.1509 | The Baltimore game is more important, Butch | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 09 1994 10:32 | 14 |
|
> Today's newspaper said that Clemens will be pushed back to Monday, and that
> Nate "the Great" Minchey will be called up from Pawtuckett to start Sunday's
> game.
This sucks! I was counting on seeing Clemens go against *division
playoff contender* Baltimore on Sunday. I don't understand how putting
Clemens on this extra-day 5-days-rest rotation of late is aiding the
putrid bullpen condition. I understood it the first time, when Clemens
needed a day to recover from that abusive twice-delayed game in Texas,
but is this really necessary?
glenn
|
88.1510 | | CAMONE::WAY | The last full measure of devotion | Thu Jun 09 1994 10:40 | 28 |
| >
> This sucks! I was counting on seeing Clemens go against *division
> playoff contender* Baltimore on Sunday. I don't understand how putting
> Clemens on this extra-day 5-days-rest rotation of late is aiding the
> putrid bullpen condition. I understood it the first time, when Clemens
> needed a day to recover from that abusive twice-delayed game in Texas,
> but is this really necessary?
>
Yeah, that sucks big donkey kong....
I saw a lot of the game yesterday, and boy did their pitching suck.
(Moe) Howard bit the big one, and then they brought in Frohwirth, and
he made Moe look like a Cy Young candidate. After that it was
Harris.
YOu know, I think that when Butch makes the bull pen call to warm up
Harris, the bull pen coach rolls out the defibrilator, digs up Harris,
jolts him, gets him warmed up, and sends him to the mound. That's how
much of a stiff he is.
And Tomberlin out in left (he of the lacerated melon) makes Greenwell
look like a Gold Glover....
'Saw
|
88.1511 | Ya buy yer ticket & ya take yer chances ... | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Thu Jun 09 1994 10:56 | 6 |
| re: Clemins pushed back a day so Waugamain can't watch stud horse pitch
Sniff, sniff. Boo hoo! (Haw haW!)
- ACC Chris
|
88.1512 | It's still only June, but if you're flipping a coin on the call... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 09 1994 12:17 | 14 |
|
> Sniff, sniff. Boo hoo! (Haw haW!)
Damn right! This is serious business...
Actually, if this news regarding the weekend rotation is what was
printed in this morning's Globe, the decision is not yet definite.
There's hope yet that Butch will come to the realization that a game
against the primary competition for a playoff spot counts double, as
a game in your win column and a game in your opponent's loss column
(and vice-versa)...
glenn
|
88.1513 | U don't *really* think rag-tag Sox will be in pennant race? | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Thu Jun 09 1994 12:23 | 5 |
| So in other words Waugamain, you'd rather see Butch risk Clemens'
health just so you can enjoy yourself a bit more on Sunday. Sad.
- ACC Chris
|
88.1514 | Not a huge deal, but I don't like it... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 09 1994 12:42 | 22 |
|
> -< U don't *really* think rag-tag Sox will be in pennant race? >-
At the risk of incurring the wrath of the intellectually dishonest New
York fans, no I don't, not really. But you have to at least put up
the good fight for as long as there's a possibility, especially with
this wildcard fiasco.
> So in other words Waugamain, you'd rather see Butch risk Clemens'
> health just so you can enjoy yourself a bit more on Sunday. Sad.
If I had knowledge of some reason for concern, I'd say sit him. For
however long it takes. However, Hobson has been conservative with
Clemens as of late. He's only gone 7 in his past two starts, with
extra rest in between. I don't know what's going on now, although I
suspect that it's Hobson's thinking just to stay in a regular rotation
with Minchey taking Hesketh's place, just to keep things nice and tidy.
I don't think it has a whole lot to do with Clemens' health, so I
disagree with it.
glenn
|
88.1515 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu Jun 09 1994 12:43 | 9 |
|
Saw,
Gold glove and Greenwell should never be used in the same
sentence!
chap
|
88.1516 | It's pitches, not innings, that matter. | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Thu Jun 09 1994 12:58 | 7 |
| re: Waugamain
Forget about how many innings Clemens has thrown lately - what have
his pitch counts been? That's the key, bucko.
- ACC Chris
|
88.1517 | | USCTR1::KING | Cemeteries = Parks with nice stones... | Thu Jun 09 1994 13:11 | 3 |
| What happened to the Red Sox notesfile????
REK
|
88.1518 | haven't heard from you... | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Thu Jun 09 1994 13:22 | 3 |
| I dunno REK..what happened??? Where have been these days??
stig
|
88.1519 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Temptation is a Gun | Thu Jun 09 1994 13:24 | 7 |
|
that's rich. Chris lecturing Glenn on his main man...hahahaa
Glenn can probably tell wether the 33 pitch Clemens threw in the game
was a slider or a fastball.......
;^)
|
88.1520 | I want my Clemens start! ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 09 1994 13:45 | 13 |
|
> Forget about how many innings Clemens has thrown lately - what have
> his pitch counts been? That's the key, bucko.
Last three starts: 119, 108, 118. Pretty ordinary for Clemens, with
an extra day's rest between the last two starts. Nothing at all to
be alarmed about, at the surface...
It was a fastball, MikeC. ;-) Roger's been throwing a lot of them
lately, with great success...
glenn
|
88.1521 | | CAMONE::WAY | The last full measure of devotion | Thu Jun 09 1994 13:57 | 13 |
| Chap,
Only Tomberlin could make me use those two terms in the same sentence.
I was concerned about his haid however. In rugby, that would be a
"nothin', mate" kind of injury that you'd tape up and keep on going. But
in baseball, they had to walk him out....
re Glenn:
Glenn sure does know his stuff......
|
88.1522 | | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Thu Jun 09 1994 14:40 | 9 |
| > Glenn sure does know his stuff
If he knew his stuff he wouldn't be whining and crying and otherwise
making a mess of this mainly notes file. The simple fact is Butch
Hobson doesn't want to burn out his best starter in June just so some
bleacher bum can enhance his hedonistic pleasures.
- ACC Chris
|
88.1523 | | MKFSA::LONG | sweet potato pie and 'Shut mah mouth' | Thu Jun 09 1994 15:01 | 4 |
| I guess the "heartbreak of March" has finally healed.
billl
|
88.1524 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Turn down the lights, the parties over | Fri Jun 10 1994 10:52 | 9 |
| Glenn, now you can see plenty of hitting; you'll probably slip in
monday anyway..
Clemens in all seriously does need the five days but I disagree about
pitches vs innings; it's a combination of the two plus a lot more
factors (difficult vs easy pitches (I hope I don't have to explain
that).
plus part of the wear and tear is mental
|
88.1525 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Like A Moth To A Flame | Fri Jun 10 1994 13:32 | 3 |
| I think Clemens has a tee time for late Sunday...
/Don
|
88.1526 | just got asked to work tomorrow too | CNTROL::CHILDS | Temptation is a Gun | Fri Jun 10 1994 16:45 | 7 |
|
> I think Clemens has a tee time for late Sunday...
think he'll ask me along? I'm looking towards a late one on sunday myself..
mike
|
88.1527 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Like A Moth To A Flame | Fri Jun 10 1994 17:21 | 3 |
| I'm sure you and old Roger would hit it off real good MikeC.
/Don
|
88.1528 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Mon Jun 13 1994 09:05 | 29 |
| Got my money's worth Friday night at Fenway. Saw a nine-inning game,
with no stoppages for weather or riots, that lasted 4 hours. That's
right, four hours. I think about a 1/2 hour was spent just waiting
for the Sox pitchers to come in from the pen! We thought it was a
prade of some kind out there.
I must say, the vendor at Fenway has a real neat way of making sure
that your stomach doesn't get upset because of temperature variations.
The warm beer and cold hotdogs were only about 5 degrees different.
A nice nite out though, as the wife got to see a lot of baseball. The
first time I took her to a Sox game, we got stuck so high in the
grandstand, we had to watch the feet of the players to see where the
flyballs were hit. We were in Section 32, row 10 this time. Not bad
seats, left field.
However, this outing was arranged by someone working at Northern Essex
CC, who apparently didn't know that Section 32 is Family Section. No
beer allowed, which my buddy found out while drinking his. Nothing
posted there indicating it was a special section.
One nice thing about being at a game, vs. TV, is seeing plays that are
basic but well done. Like Brady Anderson working on a dde fly with
runners on. He charged into the ball and got off a great throw. He
didn't get the runner, but still is was nice to see a play done
properly. Same for a DP that Palmiero started while going to his
right from 1B.
Lee
|
88.1529 | | CAMONE::WAY | The last full measure of devotion | Mon Jun 13 1994 09:50 | 3 |
| August comes in June for the Red Sox this year.
How much do they suck lately?????
|
88.1530 | It weren't Clemens, but it was...uh...interesting... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 13 1994 09:59 | 8 |
|
Thank god we had cousin Nate of the famous Pflugerville (TX) Mincheys
out there on the mound yesterday to stick his finger in this
fast-crumbling dike. I'm not exactly sure what a pflugerhorn is, but
Nate was playing the damn thing to beat the band yesterday...
glenn
|
88.1531 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Mon Jun 13 1994 10:04 | 5 |
| re: .1530
All that an a rain delay too - what more could a Red Sox fan want?
=Bob=
|
88.1532 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Yes I Am !!! | Mon Jun 13 1994 10:10 | 6 |
|
I'm actually glad Clemens didn't pitch yesterday. If he is hurting
a little from his last rain delay game. He didn't need to pitch during
another one yesterday.
Ron
|
88.1533 | Is Andre Dawson phenomenal or what? | KALI::MORGAN | | Mon Jun 13 1994 11:23 | 1 |
|
|
88.1534 | Clemens tonight so it will be Roger - 8 over last 10 games? | AD::HEATH | This is it.. the end of the curse. Sox '94 champs | Mon Jun 13 1994 11:47 | 22 |
|
Why is everyone down on the Sox? Yea they've stunk up the joint the
last couple of weeks....BFD they played some great ball early and now
its catching up with them. They ARE a .500 team no matter how you
slice it and their record will indicate that in Oct. All this talk of
wildcard/playoff in May was hogwash anyway, they simply don't have the
horses. Viola went down with nobody to pick up his quality innings but
Nate the fake, Harris is still MIA and Russell still sucks Mississippi
River water. They traded the best relief pitcher they had and still
haven't solved the run production problem. I still think that Duquette
is planning for '95 but only Blosser has really played well down in
Pawtucket. Murrary's power stats aren't bad but his average is
hovering around .220 last I saw. I would like to see the Sox just give
the kids a chance shed the likes of Valle and just see what happens.
Roger goes tonight against a very hot Twins team so it should be at
least enjoyable to watch. Nobody would be happier to see them put
it all together and win but they just don't have the talent. I'm going
to quit taking their loosing so personal and just watch baseball and
see how I like that.
Jerry
|
88.1535 | brutal 10 days - and Twins teed off the White Sox | METSNY::francus | Rangers,Knicks,Mets in '94 | Mon Jun 13 1994 11:55 | 11 |
|
> Why is everyone down on the Sox?
probably because they were misled by that great start - mostly against
sub-.500 teams.
But however bad a team is giving up 10+ runs in 7-8 of 11 or so games
is unusually bad.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1536 | Clemens goes tonight, don't worry, I'll be happily watching | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 13 1994 12:10 | 18 |
|
If you're reacting to my comments, Jerry, I think you've misread them.
I was joking, in a gallows-humor-type manner, about Nate Minchey et al.
If I were taking this losing that personally, I wouldn't bother going out
to the park to see some career AAA pitcher get his brains beat out in
the pouring rain (why did I do that, anyway?-- oh yeah, someone with a
better weather report than mine gave me his prime box seats; that's the
ticket).
However, I still disagree that most Red Sox fans would have dismissed
the possibility of that stirring wild card shot as early as a few weeks
ago, when they were drumming on Toronto and Baltimore. It's caught up
with them as we knew it would, but much quicker and more drastically
than was expected. Sometimes, even over the 162 games, mediocrity never
does get exposed. I doesn't take much to finish in second place...
glenn
|
88.1537 | | USCTR1::KING | Cemeteries = Parks with nice stones... | Mon Jun 13 1994 13:01 | 3 |
| So, where is the red sox notesfile?
REK
|
88.1538 | History will repeat itself | FRETZ::HEISER | ugadanodawonumadja | Mon Jun 13 1994 13:59 | 1 |
| They'll get hot again after I see them in person.
|
88.1539 | | METSNY::francus | Rangers,Knicks,Mets in '94 | Mon Jun 13 1994 13:59 | 6 |
| re: .1538
by then it will be too late.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1540 | Yes, last night's game was sickening | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Tue Jun 14 1994 10:34 | 21 |
|
> -< Is Andre Dawson phenomenal or what? >-
Dawson is indeed a medical marvel, a man with the absolute highest
possible tolerance for pain, but I have to admit that it turns my
stomach to see him (for the second time in the last three games!)
flailing wildly at pitches a mile outside while *up in the count*
with only one runner on and the Sox down 3 runs in the 9th inning.
As a veteran player Dawson *has* to know that just a walk in that
situation is every bit as good as a 500-foot HR. I just cannot
understand this. It's the kind of thing that Mike Greenwell gets
routinely skewered for (usually for much less, actually).
Basically it's this kind of failure of execution both mentally and
physically that is now costing the Sox even the winnable ballgames.
We know that they're not that good, and the lineup has been decimated
by injury, but they're starting to give them away now...
glenn
|
88.1541 | | METSNY::francus | could be heaven or this could be hell | Tue Jun 14 1994 10:42 | 5 |
| MikeyC's favorite pitcher comes through for him just in the nick of
time.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1542 | Los Wages odds | FRETZ::HEISER | ugadanodawonumadja | Tue Jun 14 1994 14:22 | 4 |
| BoSox are currently at 12:1 to win the World Series. They were 30:1
during preseason. They are 5:1 to win the AL pennant.
|
88.1543 | What a bunch of knuckleheads | AD::HEATH | This is it.. the end of the curse. Sox '94 champs | Tue Jun 14 1994 14:24 | 4 |
|
They obviously haven't been watching them play.
|
88.1544 | Funniest thing I've read all day .... | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Tue Jun 14 1994 14:34 | 5 |
| The Red Sox, .... 5:1 to win the AL pennant??!! Haw haw haw
haw!!!!!!111111
- ACC Chris
|
88.1545 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | NY Rangers 1994 Stanley Cup Champions | Wed Jun 15 1994 00:21 | 11 |
|
To all Red Sox, Cubs, White Sox, and other long suffering fans.
I hope you all get to experience a championship that exorcises the
ghosts of all those years without. In a funny sort of way the long
awaited triumph almost makes all those years of pain worth it.
Please just don't do it at the expense of my favorite teams.
I hope you all see that championship in your lieftimes.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1546 | Calling all Twins fans... | COMET::MACDOWELL | | Wed Jun 15 1994 02:56 | 4 |
|
Could somebody please tell me how to open my own file ? I am a
DIE-HARD Twins fan and rather than rub it in about beating the Bosox
all the time I would prefer to open a Twins topic
|
88.1547 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | NY Rangers 1994 Stanley Cup Champions | Wed Jun 15 1994 08:05 | 4 |
| use write instead of reply.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1548 | Thought it impossible, but it can and will get uglier... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 15 1994 11:52 | 18 |
|
> To all Red Sox, Cubs, White Sox, and other long suffering fans.
> I hope you all get to experience a championship that exorcises the
> ghosts of all those years without. In a funny sort of way the long
> awaited triumph almost makes all those years of pain worth it.
> Please just don't do it at the expense of my favorite teams.
Uh, I think one of your favorite teams owes us one, TCM, if not a
couple based on compensatory damages for emotional distress...
The damages in from last night: 3 egregiously bad errors, 3 unearned
runs, 4 double plays batted into, and some braindead managing thrown
in just for good measure. I don't think we'll be swapping glorious
war stories with the Rangers' fans this year. But I've promised myself
that I *will* be there when it happens. I'm still young...
glenn
|
88.1549 | | CAMONE::WAY | The last full measure of devotion | Wed Jun 15 1994 12:16 | 21 |
| > in just for good measure. I don't think we'll be swapping glorious
> war stories with the Rangers' fans this year. But I've promised myself
> that I *will* be there when it happens. I'm still young...
I've got a partially written short story brewing on the PC at home that
has the Red Sox up to 90 years without a series....
Glenn, when it happens, and we're old and grey, sitting on the front
porch of The Home just like in that wonderful old sketch that Billy Crystal
and Christopher Guest did about the two old Negro League players, when
we're sitting there like that, watching the Sox FINALLY win one, we'll
pull out a bottle of Jack that we've been hoarding and toast to all the
folks that didn't make it that far to see it....
(course, after that we'll probably get the s***s and get in trouble with
the nurses!)
'Saw
|
88.1550 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Wed Jun 15 1994 13:29 | 12 |
|
|Glenn, when it happens, and we're old and grey, sitting on the front
|porch of The Home just like in that wonderful old sketch that Billy Crystal
That's it! We've got to start planning now for the Old SPROTS Folks Home.
We can all go there to live in our 90s. I cain jest see a 90+ year old Doc
Midnight arguing wif a toofless, grey-bearded Slasher about Wilt vs. Russell.
Or a balding crotchety ACCChris defending Snuffy Smif's two chapeenships in
60 years of coaching. Or maybe JD, too old and fragile to run, but still
pumping iron to maintain his lats.
Definitley has possibilities...
|
88.1551 | | CAMONE::WAY | The last full measure of devotion | Wed Jun 15 1994 14:05 | 1 |
| Just as long as we don't have to eat creamed liver....
|
88.1552 | Welcome!! | ANGLIN::WIERSBECK | Twins ERA=Enormous Runs Allowed | Wed Jun 15 1994 15:03 | 5 |
| After all these years... another real, true Twins fan. (Not a
Wardle-vane) Alright!
Spud
|
88.1553 | Our regular daily update...it's comic at this point... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 16 1994 10:28 | 14 |
|
> The damages in from last night: 3 egregiously bad errors, 3 unearned
> runs, 4 double plays batted into, and some braindead managing thrown
> in just for good measure.
And again: 2 egregiously bad errors including Hesketh's failure to make
a 50-foot lob toss to home plate, 2 unearned runs, 2 double plays batted
into by Dawson (that's 5 in the 3-game series for Dawson), 2 whiplash
accidents incurred by Darwin, and to cap it off a ridiculously
boneheaded decision by Dawson to try to stretch a triple on his bloody
stumps with nobody out in the 7th and the Sox down 7-3...
glenn
|
88.1554 | Pray for a strike boys .... | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Thu Jun 16 1994 10:39 | 7 |
| Boy, those 5:1 odds of the Red Flops making the World Series are
looking awful long, eh?
Haw haw haw!!!!
- ACC Chris
|
88.1555 | | CAMONE::WAY | Farewell #11 | Thu Jun 16 1994 10:49 | 29 |
| Glenn, have you noticed how the Red Sox are paralleling Digital these
days?
I mean, Butch and Robbie Bob have about the same managerial acumen. Of course,
both are making the mistake of trying to see the playing field while their
heads are firmly and irretrievabley planted far up their rectums.
The coaching staff and SLT haven't a clue.
The Sox trade what some folks called their best reliever, and DEC is cancelling
stuff that was still profitable.
The Sox have some folks doing a good job, but they get lost in the shuffle,
DEC has some folks doing a good job, but they get lost in the shuffle too,
or laid off...
The Red Sox answer to all this will be "raise ticket prices" and so too
will DEC, in their futile quest to generate more revenue, charge customers
more for a now inferior product.
Geez, we can't get away from this stuff even when we watch a ball game.
I think I'm going to go find a t-ball game to watch tonight -- at least those
kids TRY.
'Saw
|
88.1556 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Thu Jun 16 1994 11:05 | 5 |
| |Glenn, have you noticed how the Red Sox are paralleling Digital these
|days?
Yabut the Red Sox don't have a salary freeze.
|
88.1557 | | CAMONE::WAY | Farewell #11 | Thu Jun 16 1994 11:30 | 5 |
| >Yabut the Red Sox don't have a salary freeze.
Players would strike if they did....8^)
|
88.1558 | | GENRAL::WADE | FearTheGovernmentWhoFearsYourGuns | Thu Jun 16 1994 11:46 | 2 |
|
Hey! ;*)
|
88.1559 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Yes I Am !!! | Thu Jun 16 1994 12:10 | 9 |
|
It looks more and more like there will be a strike this year. The
fans will be deprived of Ken Griffey going for the HR record. In Seattle's
last 162 games (full season), Griffey has hit 62 HR's. Griffey has 29 HR's
in 62 games this year. Which projected over a 162 games is 75 HR's. Still
way ahead of Maris's pace. If Griffey can get another 10/11 be the all-star
break July 11-13 it will be real interesting if there is no strike.
Ron
|
88.1560 | Twins looking to play blue sox (swept white,red) | ANGLIN::WIERSBECK | Twins ERA=Enormous Runs Allowed | Thu Jun 16 1994 14:46 | 9 |
| I heard last night that Griff JR only needs one HR to tie Babe Ruth for
the most HR's by *June 30th* That's something. Apparently, pitchers
aren't pitching around him yet, somebody's got to wake them up.
As for last night's game and Dawson getting nailed at 3B, was that by
Kirby? He still has a gun.
Spud
|
88.1561 | | METSNY::francus | NY Rangers 1994 Stanley Cup Champions | Thu Jun 16 1994 14:49 | 5 |
|
fwiw Ruth set that record in 1928 not 1927 when he hit 60 HR's.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1562 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 16 1994 14:59 | 10 |
|
> As for last night's game and Dawson getting nailed at 3B, was that by
> Kirby? He still has a gun.
No, it was McCarty out in RF last night. Puck didn't even play. With
Danny Darwin and Joe Hesketh playing the roles of the court juggler and
jester, respectively, the Twins didn't need him...
glenn
|
88.1563 | Pondering baseball's strike | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Jun 16 1994 16:41 | 10 |
| I've been wondering about whether given a strike the owners might play
with minor leaguers like the football owners did with some success;
those players with strike clauses would have to play to get paid.
Now if strike was not resolved in '94 I wonder what the status would be
if players contracts expired and had been locked out; I would guess
someone might want to organize an international "goodwill" baseball
"world series" with the athletes.
Would owners try to invoke reserve clause?
|
88.1564 | Looks like attempt to break the union,and that won't be easy... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 16 1994 17:25 | 34 |
|
> I've been wondering about whether given a strike the owners might play
> with minor leaguers like the football owners did with some success;
> those players with strike clauses would have to play to get paid.
Essentially they already are as the minor leagues will continue to
operate. While the owners could try to pass the same minor-league
ball off as major-league by just switching the uniforms on some of the
players and bringing them to the big city, I don't think there'd be a
whole lot more demand to see it than there already is. I don't think
this is in the owner's plan at all. If they are resolved they'll just
be content to see the game shut down, and then wait it out.
I'm pretty bitter about all of this. While I think there needs to be
some compromise on both sides, I'm angry that the owners played it the
way they did. The owners re-opened the contract early, in 1992, citing
economic hardship, then waited 20 months to get their acts together and
present even their starting-point proposal, well into this season.
They've made some nice talk about a "partnership" but then the initial
proposal represents a massive give-back from the current structure
(forget about free agency, arbitration, etc., the bottom line is a
salary cap that eventually reduces total revenue compensation to 50%,
from the current 58%). Whether you agree that these salary-cap
measures are necessary (I don't like what they've done to competition
in football and basketball, and don't want to see one), the timing and
the extent of the change in this contract make the strike inevitable.
If all this had happened last winter I'd have some hope. It all sure
looks calculated to me, and that tells me that the owners finally have
the resolve to ride this one out for a change...
glenn
|
88.1565 | Don't count your chickens Joe it aint over | AD::HEATH | This is it.. the end of the curse. Sox '94 champs | Fri Jun 17 1994 08:14 | 20 |
|
So lets see....I've got three more games to win two should not be
a problem. Oh by the way it is 7:15 and has anyone heard if they
have released Russell yet. This guy is horrid he has to go now.
And on a good note we finally did get a player like that. Until they
start throwing Bruno and his slider speed bat some fast balls. Is
it just me or did Butch look lost last night. I know he usually looks
like that but last night he looked like someone really did say "Your
job is on the line fix the problem" not that he has any control of
players mind you but he over managed again last night. How many
pitchers only pitched to one batter? I don't blame him for removing
Fossas after the dp (I would have left in Harris I have no faith in
Fossas) but he got the job done. But why bring in Russell to start the
9th? The new guy Valdez didn't look bad, give him a shot. I'm also
sure that Ryan could have given us about 15 or so pitches which would
have got us a W but Butch elected to go with HIS closer and it cost
him......hopefully his job.
Jerry
|
88.1566 | Why can't the Sox........... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Fri Jun 17 1994 08:31 | 8 |
|
I here Dennis Eckersley may be available.
:-)
|
88.1567 | | KALI::MORGAN | | Fri Jun 17 1994 09:36 | 7 |
| Chappy we already have a better closer than Eckersley, but Hobson
doesn't seem too anxious to use him. He wants to be loyal to Russell.
That had to be the most frustrating game to watch last night. Changes
have to be made, and I wouldn't be surprised to see Hobson go.
Steve
|
88.1568 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Movin' on up, to the east side... | Fri Jun 17 1994 10:14 | 2 |
| You already had better OF's than Brunansky and you traded for him.
|
88.1569 | I can't even look at Russell anymore... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | You promised to retire,right Jeff? | Fri Jun 17 1994 10:29 | 21 |
|
Testing, testing of p-name corruption, minus 72 hours and counting...
Hobson didn't use Ryan last night because he's been worked like a horse
lately in any kind of last-gasp effort to pull out a game during this
losing streak. The irony of it is that if Hobson (a decent person, if
a mediocre manager) loses his job in part because of his faith in a
player like Russell, it'll mean that just about the only comtemptible
crybaby and clubhouse lawyer on the team is the one that did him in.
If I'm Hobson, and I've seen Quantrill traded from under my crumbling
bullpen with no ready alternative in sight, and know I'm going to fired
for it, I bury Russell about as deep in my doghouse as I can and take
him down with me. Third inning of a blowout, call down to the bullpen,
get up and start warming, Jeff...oh yeah, get Hesky up with you...
In spite of Jerry's wise and healthy advice from the beginning of the week,
watching the end of this game damn near left me physically ill. I know
it's not a critical game for this sagging bunch, but nonetheless.., ;-)
glenn
|
88.1570 | | CAMONE::WAY | Farewell #11 | Fri Jun 17 1994 10:35 | 18 |
| > have to be made, and I wouldn't be surprised to see Hobson go.
Neither would I. Last night's game was abominable and inexusable.
If they don't have a bullpen, then they'd better sell/steal/trade for
some relief pitching.
Russell has to go. The fact that he remains with the team makes me
wonder just what it is he's doing on his knees in Hobson's office
with the door closed.
Hobson is useless. Lord, they could dig up, literally, Billy Martin,
and prop him up in the dugout and he'd probably do as well as Butch.
Sigh.....
|
88.1571 | | CAMONE::WAY | Farewell #11 | Fri Jun 17 1994 10:41 | 30 |
| > Hobson didn't use Ryan last night because he's been worked like a horse
> lately in any kind of last-gasp effort to pull out a game during this
> losing streak. The irony of it is that if Hobson (a decent person, if
> a mediocre manager) loses his job in part because of his faith in a
> player like Russell, it'll mean that just about the only comtemptible
> crybaby and clubhouse lawyer on the team is the one that did him in.
> If I'm Hobson, and I've seen Quantrill traded from under my crumbling
> bullpen with no ready alternative in sight, and know I'm going to fired
> for it, I bury Russell about as deep in my doghouse as I can and take
> him down with me. Third inning of a blowout, call down to the bullpen,
> get up and start warming, Jeff...oh yeah, get Hesky up with you...
Well, put.
You still have those bleachers seats? I know they check for blowup
dolls, but I'll bet I could get the M1 to the seats without the Hitler
Youth knowing about it. If you could just yell 'Hey Jeff, Jeff Russell,
I want your autograph!', and get him to pop his head out of the bullpen,
I could take him down with one shot. Then let the chips fall where they
may. Whatta ya say???
> In spite of Jerry's wise and healthy advice from the beginning of the week,
> watching the end of this game damn near left me physically ill. I know
> it's not a critical game for this sagging bunch, but nonetheless.., ;-)
I didn't watch the game, but saw the LOWlights on the late Sports.
Definite Hurl City......
|
88.1572 | I'll bet Bruno sees nothing but the ole #1 tonight | AD::HEATH | This is it.. the end of the curse. Sox '94 champs | Fri Jun 17 1994 10:57 | 12 |
|
I'll have to say I went to bed ill also. I know ...we all know that
Hobson is at his best shinning moment only a bad manager at best so
when the game is on the line why expect him to be able to come up with
an original thought. I second the motion of putting him the outhouse
until Butch gets canned. Russell has to be worse than any of the
whipping boys we've had in the past. Even the Steamer. I predict a
win tonight Clevesum can't keep these last inning heroics up for long.
Glen whats the poop on Valdez? Haven't seen much on him.
Jerry
|
88.1573 | Just so you'll know when the TV reports hit... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | You promised to retire,right Jeff? | Fri Jun 17 1994 11:07 | 21 |
|
> If you could just yell 'Hey Jeff, Jeff Russell,
> I want your autograph!', and get him to pop his head out of the bullpen,
> I could take him down with one shot.
That's too obvious, though. Jeff's a sneak and he'd know something
was up with that autograph ploy. We'd need to bring Butch in, and
make it an inside job. Have Hobson signal for Russell with the game
on the line in the 9th; nothing out of the ordinary there. Just make
sure you're not too trigger-happy and end up bagging Harris. Er, maybe
I should re-think that one...
In truth, I do have tickets for one of the Yankee games in two weeks
about five rows back of the Red Sox bullpen. When I got them I wasn't
all that excited about the location but now all sorts of possibilities
have opened up. Since the Opening Day fiasco this section has been
cordoned off as the "M80-family Only Section". Big Mac has already
agreed to act as my bodyguard in the aftermath...
glenn
|
88.1574 | | ROCK::HUBER | File and Forget | Fri Jun 17 1994 11:08 | 16 |
|
Re .1572
Tonight's not really the one to be looking for a win, IMHO. While
the late inning heroics can only go on for so long, I think Clemens
is a lot more likely to make them necessary than Minchey.
w.r.t Valdez - an often recycled pitcher; his stats at Pawtucket were
good. Pitched for Cleveland once, a number of years back when the
Tribe thought a 90 mph fastball was better than good results.
And I don't see why we're getting all these comments about last night's
game being a sickening game to watch; I thought it was a great game
to watch, myself... B^)
Joe
|
88.1575 | | CAMONE::WAY | Farewell #11 | Fri Jun 17 1994 11:18 | 10 |
| Glenn,
I rethought my stance on the M1 and Russell. I'd be much better off
with a couple of grenades. Easily concealed, easily gotten off, and we
can get MOST of the bullpen staff in one easy effort.
I mean, it's the worst bullpen in the AL anyway.....
'Saw
|
88.1576 | Ya know he's an expert | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Fri Jun 17 1994 12:15 | 5 |
|
Worst Bullpen....
Not according to Sean McDonough!!!
|
88.1577 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Like A Moth To A Flame | Fri Jun 17 1994 12:27 | 4 |
| Hey Glenn, remember last summer when I told you Russell was
a jerk. You jumped all over my case... 8^)
/Don
|
88.1578 | | CAMONE::WAY | Farewell #11 | Fri Jun 17 1994 12:45 | 17 |
| > Hey Glenn, remember last summer when I told you Russell was
> a jerk. You jumped all over my case... 8^)
Russell is the equivalent of Palmer.
Russell is supposed to be the fireman, the big saver, the guy who comes
in and stops all the bleeding.
Like Palmer, he comes in and pours gas on the fire, watches everything
go down the shitter while he lines his own pockets with money, and
steps up the bleeding by swinging a bloody axe that makes Jacke the Ripper
look tame by comparison.....
Russell, like Palmer, should stop being an impediment to progress and
get the hell outta Dodge.....
|
88.1579 | You weren't talking about *Bill* Russell,and Wilt Chamberlain? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | You promised to retire,right Jeff? | Fri Jun 17 1994 12:50 | 9 |
|
> Hey Glenn, remember last summer when I told you Russell was
> a jerk. You jumped all over my case... 8^)
As Russell himself said to Scotty Fletcher, I have seen The Light, and
am now at peace with myself, and you, Brother /Don...
glenn
|
88.1580 | perfect managerial material for us | CHIEFF::CHILDS | Temptation is a Gun | Mon Jun 20 1994 09:34 | 7 |
|
and in this morning's worcester paper Russell blames Duquette for a lack
of chemistry in the clubhouse as the major problem...Russell can't do
his job and blames somebody else. I'll bet Robby sent him an offer this
morning...
mike
|
88.1581 | | CAMONE::WAY | Farewell #11 | Mon Jun 20 1994 09:47 | 5 |
| Yes.
Russells sucks the big one....
Course, so does the rest of the bullpen....
|
88.1582 | Indians in 94.... 2094!!!!!!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Mon Jun 20 1994 10:00 | 6 |
|
Course so does the rest of the team!
Chap
|
88.1583 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Mon Jun 20 1994 10:02 | 8 |
| > -< Indians in 94.... 2094!!!!!!!!!! >-
Chappy,
You're just jealous that the Indians passed the Yankees this weekend...
B^)
Joe
|
88.1584 | 1994. Year of the Apple!!!!!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Mon Jun 20 1994 10:18 | 15 |
|
Why would I be jealous that a team from the central beat a team from
the East? I don't want the Yanks to finish with the best record. I
believe the team with the best record plays the Wildcard correct? Well
the best teams are gonna come out of the AL East ie NY, Baltimore or
NY, Toronto so we'll play Texas or Seattle and Cleveland or Chicago can
play Balt. or Toronto.
Chappy
P.s But if we do finish with the best record I won't complain too
much. :-)
Seeing we do have the best team in the A.L.
|
88.1585 | Please, please, let Jeff make it back to Fenway for one day... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Indians in '94 | Mon Jun 20 1994 10:47 | 10 |
|
From the sounds of Mo Vaughn's rebuttal ("that's garbage...whoever said
that needs to re-examine himself...when you don't do well you just tell
the truth, don't blame it on anything else but yourself"), Jeffy better
not come sneaking around Mo's locker for a while, or he might find
himself upside-down in a trashcan. Mo Vaughn continues to command more
respect by the day...
glenn
|
88.1586 | | CAMONE::WAY | Real men use iron sights | Mon Jun 20 1994 10:53 | 15 |
| I think we have to start the Hobson watch.
Regardless of what Clemens might say in the press to the contrary, you
have to be thinking of canning old Butch in light of the worst losing
streak in over 50 years.
Butch barely kept his job over the winter -- at least from what I read.
I think it's time for Dan Duquette to show his stones -- fire Butch and
get someone in here from outside the organization. Get some fresh blood.
JMHO,
'Saw
|
88.1587 | Which would be good mind you | AD::HEATH | Indians in '94 | Mon Jun 20 1994 12:01 | 7 |
|
I can't believe that meathead Russell. What a geek, Yea I failed again
must be the GM's fault it certianly isn't mine. I echo what Glen said
earlier, hope he don't get to close to Mo he may wind up on the DL.
Jerry
|
88.1588 | | FRETZ::HEISER | ugadanodawonumadja | Mon Jun 20 1994 14:27 | 1 |
| Anyone going to any of the Seattle games next month?
|
88.1589 | | TOOK::HALPIN | Jim Halpin | Mon Jun 20 1994 14:51 | 9 |
|
I hope Duquette quickly moves to improve the clubhouse "chemistry"
by shipping Russell's butt to any team that will give him a popcorn
vendor in return!!!
JimH
|
88.1590 | | CAMONE::WAY | Real men use iron sights | Mon Jun 20 1994 15:58 | 17 |
| > I hope Duquette quickly moves to improve the clubhouse "chemistry"
> by shipping Russell's butt to any team that will give him a popcorn
> vendor in return!!!
>
> JimH
here! here!
Jim, nexted get together that you make, I'm buying you a beer. That's
the BEST suggestion.
And let's ship Butch's ass out too....
'Saw
|
88.1591 | | CAPNET::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Mon Jun 20 1994 16:12 | 3 |
| >here! here!
Where? Where?
|
88.1592 | | CAMONE::WAY | Real men use iron sights | Mon Jun 20 1994 17:18 | 7 |
| |>here! here!
|
| Where? Where?
|
There, there.....
|
88.1593 | | CAMONE::WAY | Real men use iron sights | Tue Jun 21 1994 12:44 | 2 |
| Well, the Red Sox won last night I guess, and so Clell Laverne is saved
for another day....
|
88.1594 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Like A Moth To A Flame | Tue Jun 21 1994 13:20 | 3 |
| One game too late as far as Glenn's P-Name space is concerned...
/Don
|
88.1595 | Then, then. | DECWET::BAKER | "Tapered, so it doesn't slam shut" | Tue Jun 21 1994 15:05 | 13 |
| RE> Where, where? Here, Here. There, There
July 7, 8, 9, 10 - in Boston
July 21, 22, 23, 24 - in Seattle
I'm gonna try to make it to one in Seattle. Of course it helps since
I'm already here.
I would love it if there was a Johnson vs Clemons matchup. Wow..a hot
night.
Ciao
Steve
|
88.1596 | Why can't.................................. | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Tue Jun 28 1994 10:09 | 8 |
|
QUIET in here today?
Is it true that Boggs and Bagwell are the 2 hottest hitters in
baseball?
Chappy
|
88.1597 | | CAMONE::WAY | Real men use iron sights | Tue Jun 28 1994 10:19 | 8 |
| What, the Sox played last night?
Gee, I didn't know that. Who'd they play?
Bagwell. Don't get me started. Boggs is useless, but Bagwell.... Don't
get me started....
|
88.1598 | See ya... | SALEM::STIG | Big Sister HILLARY is Watching You!! | Tue Jun 28 1994 10:24 | 6 |
| It's been nice talking to all you guys in here!! My last day as a
DECCIE will be this Friday after 15 yrs of service. Hey, maybe this
will be a change for the better since I'll be on someone else's team
(eg. Bagwell, Boggs)now!! God Bless!!
stig
|
88.1599 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 28 1994 11:26 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1596 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "What a terrible year 1918 " >>>
> Is it true that Boggs and Bagwell are the 2 hottest hitters in
> baseball?
Frank Thomas and Ken Griffey are probably the 2 hottest hitters in baseball
but Bagwell is close and Boggs is having a very good year. Here are some stats:
Name Rc Rcg gms avr Ab Ht Hr Tb Sb BB So
Frank Thomas 96.595 17.504 67. 0.378 238. 90. 27. 190. 0. 65. 32.
Ken Griffey 83.151 12.542 69. 0.331 266. 88. 30. 197. 7. 38. 42.
Jeff Bagwell 73.544 11.962 69. 0.345 249. 86. 20. 169. 10. 36. 40.
Wade Boggs 48.614 9.179 58. 0.338 216. 73. 9. 110. 1. 39. 18.
where Rc and Rcg are Bill James Runs created and Runs created per game. Tb is
total bases, the rest should be obvious.
George
|
88.1600 | ;^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Tue Jun 28 1994 11:30 | 3 |
|
Yabbut why cain't we get players like that?
|
88.1601 | HTH | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Tue Jun 28 1994 12:42 | 7 |
|
But Kev, Where would ya play them?
Chap
|
88.1602 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 28 1994 12:46 | 23 |
| The former BoSox team as of Stat 11. Someone else can do the pitchers.
George
Name Rc gms avr Ab Ht Hr Tb Sb BB So
C Tony Pena 10.971 23. 0.338 65. 22. 0. 30. 0. 5. 8.
C Dave Valle 5.533 32. 0.185 81. 15. 1. 23. 0. 9. 19.
1B Jeff Bagwell 73.544 69. 0.345 249. 86. 20. 169. 10. 36. 40.
2B Jody Reed 29.738 64. 0.285 228. 65. 1. 79. 3. 35. 20.
SS Spike Owen 20.448 42. 0.300 120. 36. 2. 53. 2. 22. 5.
3B Wade Boggs 48.614 58. 0.338 216. 73. 9. 110. 1. 39. 18.
MI Luis Rivera 5.346 24. 0.257 35. 9. 3. 20. 0. 2. 13.
CI Todd Benzinger 24.147 66. 0.258 229. 59. 5. 84. 0. 12. 62.
OF Ellis Burks 40.686 34. 0.354 130. 46. 12. 96. 3. 15. 32.
OF Brady Anderson 38.324 68. 0.239 276. 66. 7. 106. 15. 35. 48.
OF Phil Plantier 35.495 62. 0.240 221. 53. 14. 111. 1. 25. 54.
OF Dave Henderson 17.492 39. 0.246 142. 35. 5. 59. 1. 9. 20.
OF Billy Hatcher NL 7.279 9. 0.375 32. 12. 2. 20. 0. 1. 3.
DH Bob Zupcic 4.341 20. 0.245 49. 12. 0. 18. 0. 2. 10.
|
88.1603 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Tue Jun 28 1994 13:22 | 12 |
|
Re .1599
George,
Could you add Albert Belle's numbers to that list? He's been as hot
as Griffey (lower slugging, but not by much since he doubles twice
as often, and a significantly higher OBP).
Thanks,
Joe
|
88.1604 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 28 1994 13:44 | 16 |
| List with Albert Belle. Since number 1 Tribe fan Joe Huber is asking, I added
Kenny Lofton as well.
Name Rc Rcg gms avr Ab Ht Hr Tb Sb BB So
Frank Thomas 96.595 17.504 67. 0.378 238. 90. 27. 190. 0. 65. 32.
Ken Griffey 83.151 12.542 69. 0.331 266. 88. 30. 197. 7. 38. 42.
Albert Belle 78.446 12.759 67. 0.368 253. 93. 18. 174. 7. 43. 40.
Jeff Bagwell 73.544 11.962 69. 0.345 249. 86. 20. 169. 10. 36. 40.
Kenny Lofton 68.926 10.114 66. 0.360 272. 98. 7. 150. 35. 33. 31.
Wade Boggs 48.614 9.179 58. 0.338 216. 73. 9. 110. 1. 39. 18.
where Rc and Rcg are Bill James Runs created and Runs created per game. Tb is
total bases, the rest should be obvious.
George
|
88.1605 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Movin' on up, to the east side... | Tue Jun 28 1994 13:45 | 1 |
| Would Todd Pratt's or John Flaherty's numbers be better than Valle's?
|
88.1606 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 28 1994 13:50 | 5 |
| I looked at Pratt but he's having a really terrible year. He's hitting .138
with no homers and 5 total bases in 30 at bats. Flaherty's numbers look about
the same.
George
|
88.1607 | | GRANPA::DFAUST | Bad Things, man... | Tue Jun 28 1994 14:07 | 8 |
|
Pratt never gets to play because Daulton catched over 90% of the games.
He has played ok when he's had some extended paling time, but Fregosi
won't use him as a PH because he's the only other catcher on the
roster.
Dennis Faust
|
88.1608 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Tue Jun 28 1994 14:09 | 9 |
|
Re .1604
Thanks, George.
So Belle's creating more runs per game than Junior... had a feeling
that might be the case.
Joe
|
88.1609 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Come to Daddy | Tue Jun 28 1994 14:36 | 10 |
| for the amount of space it takes up I would just as soon see the rbis
and runs scored, the latter a stat I particularly like to see. I
assume that rc is rbis + runs - homeruns (- % (some minor number).
One thing that runs scored can indicate is use of speed plus where
walks occur where they are productive (eg leading off inning, exactly
equal to a single).
the old term was runs produced and was a sports illustrated favorite in
50s and 60s until it went out of style, as will this one.
|
88.1610 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 28 1994 14:58 | 37 |
| Well, they are pretty close. And remember, Rcg is a statistical prediction
which means there is a margin of error.
Name Rc Rcg gms avr Ab Ht Hr Tb Sb BB So
Ken Griffey 83.151 12.542 69. 0.331 266. 88. 30. 197. 7. 38. 42.
Albert Belle 78.446 12.759 67. 0.368 253. 93. 18. 174. 7. 43. 40.
As for actual production Belle is running just a bit ahead. Of course these
numbers depend a bit more on contributions by team mates. Rc and Rcg are
based almost entirely on what the player does, not on what his team mates do.
R + RBI - HR
Ken Griffey 64 + 59 - 30 = 93
Albert Belle 56 + 58 - 18 = 96
Here are the formula for Rc and Rcg in Pascal.
Runs Created is:
hitters_rc :=
hitters_tb *
(
(hitters_h + hitters_bb) /
(hitters_ab + hitters_bb)
)
+
(
0.3 *
(hitters_sb - (2.0 * hitters_cs))
);
Runs Created per Game is
hitters_rcg := 27 * (hitters_rc /
((hitters_ab - hitters_h + hitters_cs)));
George
|
88.1611 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | The Wind Cries Mary | Wed Jun 29 1994 13:06 | 6 |
| Give Butch Hobson credit. He knows how to make a blowout game
interesting. Kind of reminded me of Michael Douglas in "Falling
Down". Wonder if Wade Boggs will submit his version of the blowup
to the A.L. president?
/Don
|
88.1612 | | CAMONE::WAY | Real men use iron sights | Wed Jun 29 1994 14:38 | 9 |
| Didn't see it, and heard he pushed the umps.
What was the final? I know it was 2-0 in the 1st, Boston.
Can I have a play-by-play of the Butch incident? What caused him to
come out? What did he do when he did?
'saw
|
88.1613 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Movin' on up, to the east side... | Wed Jun 29 1994 14:59 | 10 |
| Sox scored 2 in the 1st, 2 in the 2nd. NY scored the next 10 runs.
It was 9-4 and Valdez threw inside to Velarde. Velarde HR'd. Two
batters later Valdez whizzed one behind a batter. The Ump went out
and warned Valdez. Butch came out and stayed too long and the ump
booted him. Hobson sez he was pushed when the home plate ump walked
away. The home ump sez he walked away without a push. Hobson went
nuts, pushed the crew chief 2 or 3 times before Vaughn and the catcher
grabbed him. After he was grabbed he either threw a week punch or
tried to point or emphasize a point... he was TURBO::OUTTA_CONTROL...
|
88.1614 | Butch's days are numbered... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Clemens' Stats = Huge Strikezone | Wed Jun 29 1994 15:22 | 11 |
|
If Butch would have knocked the blind, incompetent Greg Kosc cold
with that aborted right hook resulting in Butch's immediate dismissal,
it would have made Sox fans happy on both counts.
Butch hasn't had this much fun at the ballpark since that incident at
Pawtucket when a gutless Yankee farmhand from Columbus held him up
while a teammate used his face as a punching bag...
glenn
|
88.1615 | | CAMONE::WAY | Real men use iron sights | Wed Jun 29 1994 15:40 | 20 |
| > -< Butch's days are numbered... >-
>
>
> If Butch would have knocked the blind, incompetent Greg Kosc cold
> with that aborted right hook resulting in Butch's immediate dismissal,
> it would have made Sox fans happy on both counts.
>
> Butch hasn't had this much fun at the ballpark since that incident at
> Pawtucket when a gutless Yankee farmhand from Columbus held him up
> while a teammate used his face as a punching bag...
I hope Butch goes. He's about as effective as someone peeing on a
house fire.
I don't understand why they don't get someone good in there -- someone
who's not part of the old boy network.
'Saw
|
88.1616 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Jun 29 1994 16:02 | 15 |
| There's no rush to replace Hobson because the Sox are not trying to win. Dan
Duquette just took over as GM and is in rebuilding mode. Notice that Pawtuckett
and New Britian are doing much better already. Duquette said he went out and
got career minor leaguers to help those clubs because he wants the younger guys
to learn how to win as well as learning how to play.
So for now what they need is a coach who can bring along the younger guys.
It's less important to get a guy who can win. If Butch can do the development
work then he's as good as anyone else.
Once the new talent comes along, then they'll go out and get a coach who can
play to win. Last spring Duquette said that it should take about 30 months to
accomplish that but that seems a little optimistic.
George
|
88.1617 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | NY Rangers 1994 Stanley Cup Champions | Thu Jun 30 1994 00:29 | 6 |
| 4-3 Yankees win in 10; not a great game but entertaining.
Has anyone ever seen Jeff Russell and Matt Young together??
The Crazy Met
|
88.1618 | What rivalry? | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Thu Jun 30 1994 00:59 | 1 |
| Yanks now 6-0 against Sox.
|
88.1619 | What rivalry | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu Jun 30 1994 10:27 | 3 |
|
Yanks 200+ more head to Head wins!
|
88.1620 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 30 1994 10:42 | 4 |
| It's not the record that makes the rivalry, it's the curse. The Yankees
are a major part of the Boston Red Sox curse.
George
|
88.1621 | Hobson's loosing it, but at least he's losening up... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Clemens' stats = Huge Strikezone | Thu Jun 30 1994 12:37 | 12 |
|
Butch Hobson on forever-misunderstood Wade Boggs' comment that it
looked like Hobson had taken a swing at umpire Greg Kosc:
"If I could have said something to him, it would be to stay there on
the bench and figure out what an 0 for 4 would do to his batting
average..."
Ouch...
glenn
|
88.1622 | Definitely the highlight of the game ..... :^( | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Thu Jun 30 1994 13:00 | 9 |
| Enjoyed that beanball Rocket Roger thru at the home plate umpire last
night when the idiot called time long after he'd started his windup.
Haw! Only thing I was waiting for was how long it'd be until Clemens
gave the batter some chin music of his own. As it was, he struck the
guy out.
- ACC Chris
|
88.1623 | Put the brooms away, YankMe fans... | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | The Wind Cries Mary | Fri Jul 01 1994 07:14 | 1 |
|
|
88.1624 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Fri Jul 01 1994 07:34 | 7 |
|
Get your playoff tickets now! The Sox are on fire!!!!!!!
Chappy
|
88.1625 | Wade says he'd never come back...is that a promise or a threat? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Vamos Argentina Todavia, - Maradona | Fri Jul 01 1994 10:43 | 17 |
|
> -< Put the brooms away, YankMe fans... >-
In hindsight (I dumped my tickets after going Wednesday), I wish I had
been there last night, not because the woeful Sox finally won after 12
straight home losses, but for no other reason than to see the reaction
of the Yankee fans after they let a surefire sweep get out of the bag.
Based on the activities in the bleachers the night before, come the 8th
inning, without even being there I *know* that they were setting new
records for obnoxious behavior...
...but no, our faithful hero Wade Boggs comes through for us in the
clutch once again! Check the glove again, Wade, I'm sure the ball is
in there! ;-)
glenn
|
88.1626 | GlennWaugamain == FauxFain? Say it ain't so! | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Fri Jul 01 1994 11:06 | 4 |
| > I dumped my tickets after going Wednesday
- ACC Chris
|
88.1627 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | Mets in '94 | Fri Jul 01 1994 12:35 | 9 |
| Glenn,
I was in the bleachers on Wed. night and didn't notice any of that real
obnoxious behavior. Now I have seen Yankee fans (and others) be
obnoxious at games and this wasn't one of those times. I saw 3 fights
break out but that happened on Pats Day as well.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1628 | A well-behaved dogboy, though... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Vamos Argentina Todavia, - Maradona | Fri Jul 01 1994 12:42 | 14 |
|
> I was in the bleachers on Wed. night and didn't notice any of that real
> obnoxious behavior. Now I have seen Yankee fans (and others) be
> obnoxious at games and this wasn't one of those times. I saw 3 fights
> break out but that happened on Pats Day as well.
No, it wasn't real bad. I don't know where you were sitting, but I was
a few rows back of the Sox' bullpen, behind some guy with orange hair,
a nosering, and a chokechain around his neck. Yep, sure enough, a
Yankee fan. Was answering to the name of "dogboy", and would perform
tricks and howl on command. That was about as bad as it got...
glenn
|
88.1629 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | Mets in '94 | Fri Jul 01 1994 13:23 | 5 |
| I guess you were in front of me. I was basically in the same area but
20 or so rows further back.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1630 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | The Wind Cries Mary | Fri Jul 01 1994 13:32 | 3 |
| Come on Glenn, come clean. DogBoy was really Craze, right?
/Don
|
88.1631 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | Mets in '94 | Fri Jul 01 1994 13:34 | 6 |
| re: .1630
I ought to sue you for libel and defamation of character :-)
The Crazy Met
|
88.1632 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | The Wind Cries Mary | Fri Jul 01 1994 13:40 | 3 |
| I know Craze. I apologize for calling you a Yankee fan...
/Don
|
88.1633 | | MSE1::FRANCUS | Mets in '94 | Fri Jul 01 1994 13:49 | 6 |
| In the spirit of the Rangers finally winning the Stanley Cup (that is
dreams do come true) I forgive you.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1634 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Jul 01 1994 13:52 | 7 |
| I was at a Yankee game once and the Yankee fans were doing something much
more disgusting than that. They were actually cheering for the foul slime
scumbag Yankees. Yuck! Double Yuck!!
That's about as low as you can go.
George
|
88.1635 | | CAMONE::WAY | Real men use iron sights | Tue Jul 05 1994 10:08 | 3 |
| Hey, at least the Sox got rid of Jeff Russell over the weekend, or whenever.
(I was on vacation and the days just kind of ran together in an alcoholic
haze 8^))
|
88.1636 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Tue Jul 05 1994 10:14 | 5 |
| Yea, Russell to Cleveland for Steve Farr (washed up releiver) and Chris Nablotz
(mediocre lefty starter, coming off rehab). Nablotz got hammered in Sunday's
game.
=Bob=
|
88.1637 | Did Bailey stink that bad or where the Halo's that good | AD::HEATH | It'll be Oct soon and Butch will be gone | Thu Jul 07 1994 08:31 | 8 |
|
I thought the Sox released Harris and the Yankmees picked him up.
If that is the case who was that servin up gopher balls last night and
why isn't he on his way back to Pawtucket?
Jerry
|
88.1638 | How much did he SUCK?????? | CAMONE::WAY | Pop quiz... | Thu Jul 07 1994 10:10 | 15 |
| That Bailey kid SUCKS. I mean, he broke the Chainsaw's "How Much Does
He Suck" Meter last night. Just dadgum busted it.
Hell, *I* could have hit him last night. Glenn Waugamain could have
pitched better -- after a few beers even.
Next to Bailey, Harris looks like HoF material......
In case anyone is wondering, Bailey is the first person every to score
higher than 5.0 on his first venture onto the Chainsaw's "How Much Does
it SUCK" Meter -- he registered a WHOPPING 15.78 last evening.....
'Saw
|
88.1639 | This is different than with some broken-down loser like Russell | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Inside de net! Inside de net! | Thu Jul 07 1994 10:36 | 10 |
|
Give Bailey a chance, though. I think he'll be okay. He's not closer
material, but I think you'll see that by sometime next season, he'll be
decent (not great, just decent).
He sure was hanging out the breaking balls last night, though...
glenn
|
88.1640 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Thu Jul 07 1994 12:05 | 7 |
| Was watching one of the highlight shows and after the second bomb
hit off Bailey, the commentator says "Put a shirt on that hanger",
I was rolling...
Jimbo
|
88.1641 | Congrats, Mo... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Inside de net! Inside de net! | Fri Jul 08 1994 10:52 | 15 |
|
Mayor Menino has declared next Monday as "Mo Vaughn Day" in the city of
Boston, as Boston's way of honoring a great athlete who is actually a
decent person, but whom wasn't seen fit to be honored as an American
League All-Star. This is just pure speculation on my part, but I
wouldn't be surprised to hear that Vaughn gets called to Pittsburgh
anyway in this Year of the Great One to receive the Roberto Clemente
Award for on- and off-the-field contributions to baseball and
humanitarian work. Others may be just as deserving, but it's hard for
me to believe that anyone (who hasn't already received the award) means
more right now to a city than Vaughn does to Boston. [I can see Dave
Winfield receiving it, too, though, as this might be his last shot.]
glenn
|
88.1642 | Congrats to Mo, it'll only get better | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Fri Jul 08 1994 11:50 | 5 |
| Mo was probably slightly behind Will Clark who is potential hof and of
course Joe Hardy but is having an all-star year. The best part of Mo
is he is improving, hits different pitchers and pitches.
He also may very well have a better second half than first half.
|
88.1643 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Movin' on up, to the east side... | Fri Jul 08 1994 15:43 | 2 |
| And some people wanted to see him traded to play Carlos Quintana...
|
88.1644 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pop quiz... | Fri Jul 08 1994 15:51 | 7 |
| >
> And some people wanted to see him traded to play Carlos Quintana...
>
The last of those people was eliminated the other day -- it wasn't pretty,
in fact it made the OJ murders look like a Chuck Connors porno flick....
|
88.1645 | If you check my lawn you might find a couple bloody gloves... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Inside de net! Inside de net! | Fri Jul 08 1994 16:47 | 18 |
|
>> And some people wanted to see him traded to play Carlos Quintana...
>
> The last of those people was eliminated the other day -- it wasn't pretty,
> in fact it made the OJ murders look like a Chuck Connors porno flick....
And very dangerously indeed, one of those people might have been Lou
Gorman, or it could have come close to that. As late as last spring
training I remember pitching a fit in RED_SOX (not an uncommon
occurence in the Gorman Era) when Trader Lou announced that if Vaughn
didn't produce, he'd be back at Pawtucket pronto, with the return of
the powerless Quintana making him expendable. Luckily Vaughn shot out
of the gates like a rocket. Rookie-season greatness is the exception,
not the rule, and patience has not been a great virtue of the Red Sox
or Boston in general...
glenn
|
88.1646 | | CSTEAM::FARLEY | | Fri Jul 08 1994 16:56 | 5 |
|
Hey Glenn, where's RED_SOX nowadays?
Kev
|
88.1647 | PLUGH; that's Needle's so you have to behave... ;-) | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Inside de net! Inside de net! | Fri Jul 08 1994 16:58 | 1 |
|
|
88.1648 | And I still mean every word of it... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Inside de net! Inside de net! | Fri Jul 08 1994 17:03 | 27 |
|
Here it is, Kev, if you were looking:
<<< PLUGH::USER$:[NOTES$LIBRARY]RED_SOX.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Boston Red Sox >-
================================================================================
Note 393.17 Spring Training 1993 17 of 52
NAC::G_WAUGAMAN 17 lines 4-MAR-1993 09:37
-< Why would he even bring this up before the games have started? >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I read that Lou Gorman is talking about the possibility of sending Mo
Vaughn back down to Pawtucket to open the season. Now there's a
confidence builder. What is wrong with this franchise? In case Lou
missed it, Vaughn was one of the Sox' (if not the most) productive
hitter in the second half of last season. And where are the lefthanded
bats on this team? The same thing happened with Plantier last year,
when after the terrible start he began to hit for about two weeks, and
*then* the Sox decided he needed an attitude adjustment. Hell, why not
just clear the organiation of all the young guys and give them a shot
to make it somewhere else, and build your team every year through the
free agent market. It's no wonder these guys have "attitude problems";
they don't know whether they're coming or going one minute to the
next...
glenn
|
88.1649 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pop quiz... | Fri Jul 08 1994 17:23 | 6 |
| If I were Duquette I'd package up Greenwell, Cooper, Fletcher, and a couple
of PTBNLs and send them to Baltimore for the rights to Benitez.... In a
HEARTBEAT I'd do that....
'Saw
|
88.1650 | | SALEM::DODA | Workin' on mysteries without any clues | Fri Jul 08 1994 17:24 | 1 |
| Pity Baltimore isn't that stupid eh?
|
88.1651 | Despite last night, Ken Ryan is one of the few things *right*... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | Inside de net! Inside de net! | Fri Jul 08 1994 17:27 | 6 |
|
If only relief pitchers could hit, run, throw, and catch (for a full
9 innings), we'd have it made! ;-)
glenn
|
88.1652 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pop quiz... | Mon Jul 11 1994 10:00 | 12 |
| > If only relief pitchers could hit, run, throw, and catch (for a full
> 9 innings), we'd have it made! ;-)
I watched this game last night between the Astros and the Cubs. There's
this guy on the Astros that is pretty amazing. His name is Bagley, or
something like that -- wait, it's Bagwell, yeah that's it.
If only the Red Sox could get a guy like that!
'Saw
|
88.1653 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pop quiz... | Mon Jul 11 1994 10:21 | 17 |
| In case you didn't hear, John Valentin made an uassisted triple play
on Friday night.
I saw it on the news, and it was pretty intense, but something surprised
him between the second and third out. He caught a line drive
and hustled to second to double up the runner there. Then it was almost
like he started to head off the field, and tagged the runner coming
down from 1st.
I don't know if he thought there was only one out and he tagged the
3rd guy as a ha-ha, or if he was just genuinely surprised that the
runner was that far down the line.
At any rate, it was pretty cool.....
'Saw
|
88.1654 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Mon Jul 11 1994 11:43 | 7 |
| paper said that Valentin thought there was 1 out when he made the play.
9th unassisted triple play in MLB history (1 was in the WS - 1920, same
game where a pitcher hit a HR for the first time in a WS game and I believe
it also included the first grand slam in WS history).
The Crazy Met
|
88.1655 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Jul 11 1994 12:31 | 7 |
| It sure looked like Valentin thought there was already one
out, considering the way he nonchalantly tagged the runner
going to second. Of course, said runner knew Valentin could
easily throw the ball to first, but he (Valentin) still looked
very nonchalant.
Scott
|
88.1656 | Another unassisted TP | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Mon Jul 11 1994 12:50 | 2 |
| Second unassisted TP in last three years after none for 24 years.
Mickey Marandini of Phillies was last to do it in 1992.
|
88.1657 | And I had just tuned in... | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Jul 11 1994 13:19 | 11 |
| And the ninth inning was something else Friday.
Ryan came in after the new lefty had allowed seattle to come withing 1.
First batter hit a hard one hopper that cooper speared and thru in the
dirt and naehring scooped.
then Tinsley flew thru the air to grab a gapper in right center.
Finally Seattle had the game tier going and Chamberlain leaped over
Tinsley into the bullpen to catch the last out.
|
88.1658 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Mon Jul 11 1994 15:29 | 9 |
|
> Others may be just as deserving, but it's hard for
> me to believe that anyone (who hasn't already received the award) means
> more right now to a city than Vaughn does to Boston. [I can see Dave
> Winfield receiving it, too, though, as this might be his last shot.]
Winfield did receive the Clemente Award... announced today...
|
88.1659 | | CAMONE::WAY | Put some hope in your rope | Tue Jul 12 1994 09:42 | 6 |
| Heard Gorman on ESPN last night and this guy is STILL defending his
trade of Bagwell. His reasoning: "if we had one the world series, no one
ever would have questioned the trade"....
That's rich.....
|
88.1660 | You don't get to make mistakes like these twice... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Tue Jul 12 1994 10:04 | 12 |
|
> Heard Gorman on ESPN last night and this guy is STILL defending his
> trade of Bagwell. His reasoning: "if we had one the world series, no one
> ever would have questioned the trade"....
On numerous occasions I have heard Lou even utter the very words "if I
had it to do over I'd do the same thing again". I'd have more respect
for the man (overall he did do a decent job in Boston, after all) if
he'd just admit the mistake and move on...
glenn
|
88.1661 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Yes I Am !!! | Tue Jul 12 1994 11:39 | 15 |
|
I'm not defending Lou Gorman here, even though he gets bashed far
too much for trading Bagwell.
At the time Jeff Bagwell was NOT as highly rated as other sox
prospects. Scott Cooper was rated ahead of Bagwell at 3rd base, Vaughn
was rated ahead of him at 1st. So there was no need to play him at
1st. Bagwell was traded 6 years ago, it took him another 3 to develop
since the trade. Six years ago where would you be projecting Bagwell
to play on the '94 Red Sox. Back then he was projected as not having
a spot in Boston. So they traded him to shore up the bull pen for the
pennant race.
Bagwell just didn't project into the Red Sox future. It's just
unfortunate that he blossomed into an All-Star late.
Ron
|
88.1662 | Didn't take him long to develop | 9870::TESSIER | | Tue Jul 12 1994 12:34 | 16 |
| Re.
> Bagwell was traded 6 years ago, it took him another 3 to develop
> since the trade. Six years ago where would you be projecting Bagwell
> to play on the '94 Red Sox. Back then he was projected as not having
> a spot in Boston. So they traded him to shore up the bull pen for the
> pennant race.
> Bagwell just didn't project into the Red Sox future. It's just
> unfortunate that he blossomed into an All-Star late.
I thought Bagwell was traded in 1990. I wouldn't exactly say it took
him 3 years to develop after the trade. In his first year with Houston
he started at first base and was named the N.L. Rookie of the Year. He's
been consistent ever since with this year his best yet.
Ken
|
88.1663 | But At least we have the Patriots (Who would have ever thought) | MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS | | Tue Jul 12 1994 12:54 | 9 |
| I thought it was an unwritten rule that you had to be on the redsox's
roster for at least 1 season before you can be traded and then become
and all-star :-)
Seems theyve traded away/released many players better then the one's
they have left on the team today :-)... The Redsox's and Celtics need
a new crystal ball, the one theyve been using the last decade of so
must be broken...
mab
|
88.1664 | Those very forgiving comments don't stand up to the record... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Tue Jul 12 1994 13:41 | 29 |
|
> I thought Bagwell was traded in 1990. I wouldn't exactly say it took
> him 3 years to develop after the trade. In his first year with Houston
> he started at first base and was named the N.L. Rookie of the Year. He's
> been consistent ever since with this year his best yet.
Bagwell was essentially fully developed as a hitter while still in
the Red Sox system. He was no secret. At the time he was traded
(less than four years ago, not six) he was a 22-year-old one year
removed from college, who was leading AA in hitting in his first
full year in the pros. That's a rare accomplishment, a sign of an
early bloomer (not a late one) and of a great natural hitting
talent. All of this talk about how his advancement was blocked is
pure smokescreen from the likes of Gorman; you don't give great
hitting prospects away regardless of what position they play, you
find a place for them (gee, who have the Sox had at DH the last
two years?). Bagwell was most certainly not some kid who was hitting
.230 and found himself later; he was the best performer in the system
in 1990. [As a sidenote, to his credit, the one member of the
"braintrust" who is no longer around-- Joe Morgan-- was the lone
dissenter at the top in the decision, and the one who had the least
job security in the short term!]
Mo Vaughn and Jeff Bagwell were selected in the same draft in 1989
(neither in the very top picks), representing some great scouting
work that was not allowed to come to fruition...
glenn
|
88.1665 | Have to make that trade | PTOVAX::SCHRAMM | | Tue Jul 12 1994 14:21 | 22 |
|
Bagwell was not going to help the Red Sox in '90 - they needed help in
pitching and unfortunatly it did not come cheap.
The Pirates did the same thing in 1989 and 1990. In 1989, they traded a
kid named Mark Merchant who was deamed the second coming of Clemente
(he was the second pick OVERALL in the draft where Seatle picked
Griffey) for immediate SS help. Well, last I heard Merchant is
struggling in AA.
In 1990 the Pirates needed a LHP late in the season to combat the Mets.
The Pirates aquired Zane Smith from Montreal for a few Pirate
prospects. The prospects - Scott Ruskin P (i think he might be out of
baseball now), Willie Greene (up/down with Cinci) and Mosies Alou
(OUCH!). The Pirates had a feeling that Alou would be a star someday
but he was no help to the Pirates in 1990. Before the playoff format
changed this year, if a team is in contention and some of the teams
future needs to be mortgaged to give you a better chance of winning THIS
YEAR - you need to do it! I am not sure if the Pirates would of held
off the Mets without Zane Smith.
The Red Sox GM did the right thing.
|
88.1666 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jul 12 1994 14:31 | 17 |
| Gorman is right about one thing. If they had won the world series that year,
he wouldn't be getting 1/10th the flack that's he's now getting for the Bagwell
trade.
Can anyone think of a single occasion where a team that had not won a
championship in decades traded away a prospect for an old pro, won, then got
beat up for making the trade?
If the Sox had won the 1990 World Series, there would be a bronze statue of
Gorman sitting next to the statue of Red at Fanieul Hall and hardly anyone
would be complaining about the Bagwell trade.
The question is, did the trade really improve their chances of winning in
1990? If it did not, then it was a bad trade. If it did, but they lost anyway
because of bad luck then it was a good trade.
George
|
88.1667 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Gonna bang some heads... | Tue Jul 12 1994 14:42 | 2 |
| Doyle Alexander for John Smoltz?
|
88.1668 | Bagwell was just the wrong guy | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Jul 12 1994 15:03 | 13 |
| Doyle Alexander got the tigers the 1987 division but they lost the ac
Anderson did the same for sox. THEY WOULD NOT HAVE WON 1990 DIV.
without him (not that they didn't get a lot more help from 23 others)
But sox and tigers lost in div.
And you can't win a championship without a division first.
Back before 1970 pennant race itself was enough, ws was a bonus.
I think the problem is that bagwell was the wrong guy to let go, for
that I blame gorman.
|
88.1669 | with the second look FA it we even more stud | AD::HEATH | It'll be Oct soon and Butch will be gone | Tue Jul 12 1994 15:15 | 10 |
|
Why couldn't the Sox win without Andersen? Didn't he only have one
save down the stretch? I think they win the division with or without
him. Also wasn't that the year that the A's got Baines and Lou uttered
those now infamous words "where would we play him?". I still feel that
was an panic trade and anybody will be hard pressed to convince me
otherwise.
Jerry
|
88.1670 | There has to be a standard..."improvement" alone not sufficient | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Tue Jul 12 1994 15:55 | 38 |
|
> The question is, did the trade really improve their chances of winning in
> 1990? If it did not, then it was a bad trade. If it did, but they lost anyway
> because of bad luck then it was a good trade.
Under these very broad criteria, there has never been a bad trade in
the history of baseball, because at the time the trade is made (one
assumes) the GM is improving the team in the short term. Such
short term decisions are very easy to make.
Obviously, you can't run a ballclub that way. You have to know your
own talent, and you have to know your competition for the championship.
You have to be able to *measure* both, not just take anything that
comes along. In 1990, the addition of Larry Andersen didn't come close
to making the Red Sox better than the Oakland A's, even before they got
to the NL representative. Larry Andersen isn't even a Zane Smith or a
Doyle Alexander (again, not even close); he was a 38-year-old
journeyman long reliever with a high salary that Houston was more than
willing to let go, for next to nothing. So you really still want to
pay almost any price for such a marginal commodity? Hey, this doesn't
require any particular genius; you haven't and never again will see
any clubs parting with their top prospects for a Jeff Reardon, Jeff
Russell, or Greg Harris for the stretch drive. If only there were
such reciprocal agreements for stupidity between other teams and the
Red Sox!
Because in baseball an individual's performance over the short term is
so unpredictable, I'm convinced that you're best off building your team
for the long haul to yield the most opportunities over the years, so
that the probabilities can work in your favor. Otherwise, you're just
rolling the dice, and anyone with limited managerial ability can do
that. If you think an excellent young prospect stands a good chance at
becoming a perennial All-Star, a guy that improves your team over many
seasons instead of just one or two, you exclude him from the list of
possibilities.
glenn
|
88.1671 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Tue Jul 12 1994 16:49 | 44 |
|
> Hey, this doesn't require any particular genius; you haven't and never
> again will see any clubs parting with their top prospects for a Jeff
> Reardon, Jeff Russell, or Greg Harris for the stretch drive.
I like that example.
Cleveland felt they had a need for bullpen help, particularly in the
form of a closer, and didn't feel that the pitchers in AAA were
ready (whether or not either of these conclusions was valid is
another matter altogether).
So they talked to a lot of teams about closers - Aguilera, Eck, and
Russell were specifically mentioned. Among the names of Cleveland
players mentioned, Tavarez & Lopez were high on the list.
When they finally pulled off a deal, did it include Tavarez, Lopez,
Bell, Jackson, or even Ogea or Lewis? No.
It included Steve Farr and Chris Nabholz. Neither of whom will
ever be mistaken, talent-wise, for Jeff Bagwell.
And in return they got Russell, who (IMHO) is more likely to help
in the short term this year than Andersen was in 1990.
Trading a Jeff Bagwell for _any_ short term goal is a bad deal.
If you want real help, help can almost always be acquired for
a lower level talent (e.g. Toronto's annual pennant drive deals).
If those players go on to develop (ala Moises Alou), oh well -
that happens sometimes. Even a top-notch pitching prospect can
be spared if needed, because pitching prospects don't pan out
regularly enough that the risk outweighs the gain. But the
development of hitters is well understood, and guys who tear
up the minors like Bagwell or Manny Ramirez are going to succeed
with such regularity that unless you're getting an incredible
deal - receiving a young superstar in return - the risk of losing
a valuable long-term player will always outweigh the gain.
Joe
P.S. Look at any list of the worst trades in baseball history.
They fall into three categories - money trades, surprise developments,
and hot-prospect throw-ins (e.g. Sandberg, Bagwell). A GM can't
do much about the first two, but s/he certainly can avoid the third...
|
88.1672 | Like mediocre free agents--if it ain't quality, don't bother | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Tue Jul 12 1994 17:22 | 12 |
|
> P.S. Look at any list of the worst trades in baseball history.
>
> They fall into three categories - money trades, surprise developments,
> and hot-prospect throw-ins (e.g. Sandberg, Bagwell). A GM can't
> do much about the first two, but s/he certainly can avoid the third...
Yabbut, Joe, where would the Phillies have been in their aborted
championship run of 1982 without Ivan DeJesus? ;-)
glenn
|
88.1673 | The Gillick | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Tue Jul 12 1994 17:23 | 13 |
| There is a new type of trade in 1990's baseball,maybe we should call it
the gillick after Toronto's GM. You trade prospects for a soon-to-be
free agent who can help you win that year.
If you don't sign the free agent,you reload with the high draft picks
you get. Is Toronto upset about losing two productive young
players,Ryan Thompson and Jeff Kent,to the Mets for a player (David
Cone) that helped them win a world championship?
BTW,many of the trades judged worst have often been deals where the
player who turned out successful may not have prospered in his original
venue. Met's blunders Gregg Jeffries and Nolan Ryan were two such
examples.
|
88.1674 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Tue Jul 12 1994 17:30 | 7 |
| > Met's blunders Gregg Jeffries and Nolan Ryan
certainly Ryan who became a star immediately. OTH Jefferies didn't exactly
light it up in KC.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1675 | This was no excuse for the Mets... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Tue Jul 12 1994 17:47 | 17 |
|
>> Met's blunders Gregg Jeffries and Nolan Ryan
>
> certainly Ryan who became a star immediately. OTH Jefferies didn't exactly
> light it up in KC.
No, but Jefferies was productive and perhaps more importantly still
young enough (only 25) that KC turned around and pulled a bigger rock
than the Mets did. With Jefferies the "problem" was more one of image
than substance. Remember how all those Cards' fans were squealing
about this deal when they were in actuality stealing KC blind (for
the likable Felix Jose)? Fans get used to veteran "name" players
and don't appreciate how important youth is in baseball, until about
a year later, of course...
glenn
|
88.1676 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Tue Jul 12 1994 18:03 | 26 |
|
> There is a new type of trade in 1990's baseball,maybe we should call it
> the gillick after Toronto's GM. You trade prospects for a soon-to-be
> free agent who can help you win that year.
> If you don't sign the free agent,you reload with the high draft picks
> you get. Is Toronto upset about losing two productive young
> players,Ryan Thompson and Jeff Kent,to the Mets for a player (David
> Cone) that helped them win a world championship?
No - because they were OK prospects, who had decent-but-not-fantastic
numbers. Look at the group of player the Jays traded - Whiten,
Hill, Boucher, Bell, Kent, Thompson, Karsay, and others who aren't
coming to mind - and there's not one sure-thing among them. Some
like Kent and Bell have blossomed into productive players; some
like Hill have faded away. But not one was as sure a bet as
Bagwell or Sandberg.
One of the critical mistakes teams have made in the past is not
understanding minor league statistics, and therefore dismissing them.
Teams are better about that now; a manager like Duqeutte knows that
he can deal an older prospect like McNeely or Murray or even Blosser to
improve the chances of winning a pennant/WS, but isn't going to
let Frankie Rodriguez go anywhere.
Joe
|
88.1677 | We're talking big-time prospect, and big-time blunder... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Tue Jul 12 1994 18:33 | 22 |
|
> One of the critical mistakes teams have made in the past is not
> understanding minor league statistics, and therefore dismissing them.
Yeah, George's mentor Bill James predicted that Jeff Bagwell would be
the NL ROY in 1991 without spending so much as one year (or even part
of a season) in Houston's minor league system. And he proceeded to do
exactly that, without playing even one day in the minors after leaving
the Sox. That's probably the thing that bothers me the most about
Gorman's rhetoric and revisionism; he was dealing with a very
well-known quantity, and he makes it sound like it was all a crapshoot.
Even Peter Gammons was updating us in Boston on almost a bi-weekly
basis on the exploits of this kid at New Britain...
You're absolutely correct, too, that all of these other names that come
up pale in comparison with the rare one like Bagwell or Sandberg. And
then you look at the name on the other side of the ledger (Larry
Andersen) and it makes you want to be ill (unless you're an Astros'
fan).
glenn
|
88.1678 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Yes I Am !!! | Wed Jul 13 1994 09:51 | 6 |
|
I stand correctted on '90 and not '88. I forgot that the sox won
every other year from '86 - '90. I thought they only won the east in
'86 and '88.
Ron
|
88.1679 | Andersen right guy, bagwell wrong guy | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Jul 13 1994 13:13 | 12 |
| I will definitely yield to the criticism of gorman's anderson - bagwell
fiasco in that bagwell was the wrong guy and gorman should have known
it - ironically bagwell's sin seemed to be that he was a right handed
contact hitter (power seems to have surprised most everyone).
somehow gorman lost the ability to deal...
But as far as anderson and his importance to '90 pennant I am going on
recollection and that is that anderson was crucial in a minimum of
three games that he kept them in that they won. I also recollect that
morgan (who is reported as the dissenter in letting go bagwell) over
used anderson and ruined him for the season.
|
88.1680 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Wed Jul 13 1994 13:44 | 27 |
|
> (power seems to have surprised most everyone).
Even that shouldn't have been a surprise - Bagwell's isolated slugging
(SLG%-BA) using park/league/etc. adjusted totals (adjusted, FWIW,
to the AL in '92) throughout his career:
1989 - .113
1990 - .131
1991 - .153
1992 - .188
1993 - .190
This is a nice, normal, typical progression - nothing at all out of
the ordinary given his age.
Just because I think they're interesting, the same numbers for Frank
Thomas (who, I understand, was born the very same day as Bagwell):
1989 - .125 (193 AB)
1990 - .237 (AA)
1990 - .194 (Majors)
1992 - .228
1992 - .219
1993 - .274
Joe
|
88.1681 | If all other evidence wasn't enough, more cruelty | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Wed Jul 13 1994 13:49 | 10 |
|
> Just because I think they're interesting, the same numbers for Frank
> Thomas (who, I understand, was born the very same day as Bagwell):
When a kid is born in the city of Boston, to a New England family
(Connecticut, actually) that lives and breathes for the Red Sox and to
hate the Yankees, you just don't tempt the fates...
glenn
|
88.1682 | | PTOVAX::SCHRAMM | | Wed Jul 13 1994 13:52 | 7 |
|
I still think the Boston GM made the right move with Bagwell. Bagwell,
though highly regarded, was still a PROSPECT. For every highly regarded
PROSPECT that make it big time you can come up with many who failed or
were mediocre at best. Remeber Clint Hurdle? He was supposed to be
the superstar of the 70's for KC. Never happened. There are many, many
others as well. Bagwell could of easily been a bust.
|
88.1683 | Every player in the HOF started as just a prospect... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Wed Jul 13 1994 14:18 | 22 |
|
> I still think the Boston GM made the right move with Bagwell. Bagwell,
> though highly regarded, was still a PROSPECT. For every highly regarded
> PROSPECT that make it big time you can come up with many who failed or
> were mediocre at best.
That's what talent evaluation is all about. The logical extension to
believing that all prospects are essentially created equal is that you
don't need a GM, farm director, scouts, etc., at all. A look at
the most consistently successful organizations easily disproves the
theory that it's mostly luck. Why do you think that (with the possible
exception of 1946) the Red Sox have not fielded a team with a strong
possibility of winning a World Series since 1918?
What if the Pittsburgh Pirates had decided that while talented, Roberto
Clemente (Dodgers' property) was still nonetheless "just" a prospect and
instead of selecting him in the re-entry draft decided to pick up the
"proven" veteran reliever Joe Black (whom they were also scouting)? What
it boils down to is the ability of talent evaluators to do their jobs.
glenn
|
88.1684 | | CAMONE::WAY | Put some hope in your rope | Wed Jul 13 1994 15:01 | 4 |
| > it boils down to is the ability of talent evaluators to do their jobs.
And on the Bagwell deal Gorman sucked pond water.....
|
88.1685 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Wed Jul 13 1994 15:08 | 70 |
|
> I still think the Boston GM made the right move with Bagwell. Bagwell,
> though highly regarded, was still a PROSPECT. For every highly regarded
> PROSPECT that make it big time you can come up with many who failed or
> were mediocre at best.
Only because players are labelled "prospects" for reasons such as
athletic ability or college performance which don't necessarily
translate well into major league success. Even as the importance
of minor league stats has become better and better understood, this
is still ignored: just look at Baseball America's top 10 prospects
lists - guys like Todd Van Poppel, who never demonstrated any
real success in the minor leagues, regularly get listed as #1
prospects. Some of these guys _do_ eventually have good, or
even great, major league careers, but many of them don't.
The key is to look for two things: raw athletic talent -and-
minor league results. Some of those hitter will still fail,
but the vast majority will become good major league players.
Furthermore, _most_ of the superstars were, at one point,
minor leaguers getting top results at a young age.
Let's look at all the hitting prospects who put up seasons
as good (or nearly so) as Bagwell's '90 while being no older
than Bagwell was in '90 (22):
22 year olds:
Ryan Klesko (not quite as good as Bagwell's)
Tony Tarasco (nqag)
Roberto Petagine (slightly better than Bagwell's)
Jim Thome (better than Bagwell's)
21 year olds:
Carlos Delgado (nqag)
Rondell White (nqag)
Chipper Jones (nqag)
Manny Ramirez (better)
20 year olds:
Cliff Floyd (nqag)
That's it. There's _lots_ of top notch prospect, guys I wouldn't
deal for a Larry Anderson, who don't make the list, and I was fairly
liberal in taking guys who weren't quite as good.
So that's 9 guys who had seasons as good as Bagwell had just had
when he was traded. Of those nine, five are already productive
major league players (Klesko, Tarasco, Thome, Ramirez, and Floyd),
two are spliting time between AAA and the majors this year (Delgado
and White) and one's out for the year with an injury (Jones).
Petagine hasn't played much that I can find for some reason,
but's been OK when he has played.
Of these nine, how many do you think won't make it? (I'd say
no more than 1.)
> Remeber Clint Hurdle? He was supposed to be the superstar of the
> 70's for KC. Never happened. There are many, many others as well.
Sure - because the label prospect gets put on guys like Todd Van Poppel
and stick even when it becomes clear that they can't (at least
currently) play. Some of them eventually break through; most of
them don't.
> Bagwell could of easily been a bust.
No, he couldn't have been. He could have been a bust, yes - but it
would have been terribly surprising if he had been.
Joe
|
88.1686 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Yes I Am !!! | Wed Jul 13 1994 16:53 | 10 |
|
Lets not confuse the Bagwell trade with the Jeff Russell trade.
Bagwell was traded at the trading deadline of August 31st. You
want Larry Anderson you pay the price. Your not going to get a top
prospect from the Indians at the beginning of July for Russell.
If it was the end of August and the Tribe was in first place. I
think the sox could have had one of the Tribes top prospect instead
of Nablotz and Farr.
Ron
|
88.1687 | Enough already, but let's be serious... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | R-r-r-r-r-o-b-y Baggio! | Wed Jul 13 1994 17:02 | 20 |
|
> Lets not confuse the Bagwell trade with the Jeff Russell trade.
> Bagwell was traded at the trading deadline of August 31st. You
> want Larry Anderson you pay the price. Your not going to get a top
> prospect from the Indians at the beginning of July for Russell.
Okay, Jeff Reardon, August 31. Another 38-year-old reliever of suspect
quality. The price: total non-prospect Nate Minchey.
I don't know if this is just self-delusion or what but let's just think
clearly about what we're talking about here. Larry Andersen. Larry
Freakin' Andersen, not Goose Gossage. He certainly did help win the
division but this is not a guy you give up more than a couple
sandwiches for, under any circumstances. What were the Astros going to
do with the guy had Gorman not offered up the store? Let him walk,
that's what. Maybe they talked Lou into giving up more because
Andersen hadn't hit his 40th birthday yet...
glenn
|
88.1688 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Jul 13 1994 17:11 | 18 |
| So did Anderson help them win the division or not?
If Anderson was not effective and did not improve their chances of winning
then yes it was a bad trade. But if he did help them win their division and
made the difference in getting into the playoffs, and if he gave them a
reasonably better chance to win the championship then it was worth while.
They had a chance in 1990. They were one of the last 4 teams. If they had
won, no trade would have mattered. A Red Sox Championship would be worth
trading away the entire organization and starting all over from scratch.
The Sox haven't won in 76 years. So what if it took them 10 years to rebuild
after winning a championship? It would be worth what ever it cost.
I still say that if the Sox had won, Gorman's statue would be down at Fanieul
Hall and no one would be complaining about the Bagwell trade.
George
|
88.1689 | Rangers/Bosox parallel again | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Wed Jul 13 1994 17:15 | 15 |
| � They had a chance in 1990. They were one of the last 4 teams. If they had
�won, no trade would have mattered. A Red Sox Championship would be worth
�trading away the entire organization and starting all over from scratch.
It's funny; I felt the same way about the NY Rangers as did many of
their recent GM's.
I had no problem with the 'renting' of Craig McTavish and Glenn
Anderson for two months. Severla years ago,then GM Phil Esposito made a
horrendous trade for Marcell Dionne,who gave them about 1 good year.
Everytime I watched Washington players Mike Ridley and Kelly Miller kill
the Rangers I thought of that trade.
Now that they finally have won all is forgotten.
|
88.1690 | beware of ... | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Jul 13 1994 17:26 | 2 |
| How about if all the redsox fans chip in and buy a guard dog to keep
the newyorkers out of this note.
|
88.1691 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Wed Jul 13 1994 17:29 | 5 |
| we would bomb the dog and take out anyone else who happened to be in the way.
HtH
The Crazy Met
|
88.1692 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Thu Jul 14 1994 08:04 | 7 |
|
That dog better bring Friends!!!
Chap
|
88.1693 | | SOLANA::MAY_BR | one bourbon,one scotch, and one beer | Thu Jul 14 1994 13:21 | 5 |
|
...because there are two New Yorkers in here, and they haven't had any
for a while.
brews
|
88.1694 | | METSNY::francus | Mets in '94 | Thu Jul 14 1994 13:33 | 6 |
| re: .1692
I'm sure REK would volunteer to come along.
The Crazy Met
|
88.1695 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Mon Jul 18 1994 16:49 | 10 |
| I know it is last week's conversation but...
The Bagwell trade is a pet peeve of mine. Gorman had never seen Bagwell play
before trading him. The word around was that the Red Sox could have given
up Scott Cooper for Anderson. Granted, the Red Sox needed someone like
Anderson, and granted Scott Cooper is a nice player, but IMO it was a case of
stupidity, based on 1960s baseball thinking. This was during the Red Sox era
when they were using year-old scouting reports.
=Bob=
|
88.1696 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Jul 18 1994 18:14 | 10 |
| the globe can't seem to let go of the bagwell talk either. They
revealed the other day that kevin morton and/or a few other
forgettables were acceptable to houston.
But the sox unfortunately were NOT in 60s mode they were chasing
pitching, something the old sox never paid attention to.
Pitching is hard to guage as some pitchers can pitch with excellent
defense such as inumerable yankees like terry,ditmar,turley,raschi and
never do it on another club.
|
88.1697 | Damn, I wish Chappy was here. 8^) | 30008::ROBICHAUD | Rock Lobster | Wed Jul 27 1994 12:21 | 1 |
|
|
88.1698 | | CAMONE::WAY | Engine room hand, goes down with ship | Wed Jul 27 1994 12:28 | 15 |
| Bagwell became the first player to hit over 100 RBIs this season as he
cranked out his 33rd tater in last night's game against Cincinnati.
Why can't the Sox get guys like that? 8^)
Sox looked so-so last night against the Yanks, IMO. Yeah, they finally
scored some runs, but man, their pitching......[insert big head shake here].
And Butch, man, he looked absolutely lost when the pitching started its
inevitable Electrolux action....
'Saw
|
88.1699 | About 70 more days of the Hobson reqime | AD::HEATH | It'll be Oct soon and Butch will be gone | Wed Jul 27 1994 12:45 | 17 |
|
I didn't think that they where that bad. Nabholz absolutely
stunk up the joint the first inning but seemed to settle down
and find his control. I'll give Butch credit for not yanking
him in the first. (I would have) Looks like Mo has snapped
outa the funk he was in, 4 hits 4 rbis and a two run BLAST to
boot. Sele goes tonight against Perez my money is on the
Sox. Sele has pitched well against them twice with squat to
show for it and tis time to cash in. Would like to see Wedge
in as DH. Chambermaid has proven to be a complete bust and if
I didn't know better I'd swear Daja Lou made that trade. I don't
think the Sox will be any where near the top come Oct (strike or
not) but I'd love to see 'em sweep these dopes and give the O's
a chance to right their ship. Anybody but the Yankmees please.
Jerry
|
88.1700 | | CAMONE::WAY | Engine room hand, goes down with ship | Wed Jul 27 1994 12:57 | 11 |
| Bankhead looked like doo-doo to me.
I didn't see the early part of the game. We had a wicked thunderstorm going
on and when this HUGE spark shot out of the TV I figured I'd better turn
it off for a while......
Yeah, hopefully butch'll be gone after this season....
'Saw
|
88.1701 | | TOOK::HALPIN | Jim Halpin | Wed Jul 27 1994 16:27 | 13 |
|
>Sox looked so-so last night against the Yanks, IMO. Yeah, they finally
>scored some runs, but man, their pitching......[insert big head shake here].
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
When are we going to get Hypertext notefiles ???
JimH
|
88.1702 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | You gotta put down the duckie... | Wed Jul 27 1994 16:30 | 3 |
| | When are we going to get Hypertext notefiles ???
In VMS - get real Jimmy.
|
88.1703 | | CAMONE::WAY | Engine room hand, goes down with ship | Wed Jul 27 1994 16:34 | 13 |
| >
>In VMS - get real Jimmy.
>
Yeah, tell me about it.....
Man, every once in a while, for a big old visceral thrill, I fire up
Mosaic on my risc box and tool around..... Course I don't have all the
doo-dads I need to make it really work, but it's cool to get on NASA and
read the public domain space shuttle records...
'Saw
|
88.1704 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Mon Aug 01 1994 08:56 | 6 |
|
2 words.
Jody Reed!!!!!!!
|
88.1705 | 13 to be exact | KALI::MORGAN | | Mon Aug 01 1994 09:10 | 2 |
|
3 words. Base on balls!!!!!
|
88.1706 | 2 for 1 ?? | AIMHI::CORRIGAN | | Mon Aug 01 1994 12:48 | 5 |
|
anyone know if today's DH with Toronto is single admission??
|
88.1707 | Single | OPTION::LAZARUS | David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353 | Mon Aug 01 1994 12:57 | 1 |
| It starts at 5:05,so it should be single admission.
|
88.1708 | two for the price of one.....only a few days left in the season | AD::HEATH | It'll be Oct soon and Butch will be gone | Mon Aug 01 1994 13:01 | 6 |
|
It is for sure. They are only allowed one split admission DH per year
I think. The Cleveland (or B'more I foret) is a split bill.
j/
|
88.1709 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Mon Aug 01 1994 21:07 | 12 |
|
Re .1708
Cleveland.
Easy prediction of the day:
After being allowed to throw over 140 pitches tonight, Aaron Sele
either (1) has an ERA over 5.00 or (2) goes on the DL or (3) both
during the next month.
Joe
|
88.1710 | The erosion of pitching talent personified... | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is two years old!! | Wed Aug 10 1994 10:19 | 7 |
| I'm sure there is a worse pitcher in MLB right now than Todd Frowirth, but I'll
be darned if I can think of one. I didn't see the game lasted night, but I was
not at all surprised to hear that he blew it. To me this guy looks like
he is throwing batting practice. I went to a game in Pawtuckett (AAA) lasted
week, and he pitched. Even Syracuse teed off on him, and he blew that game too.
=Bob=
|
88.1711 | Worried about Mo | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Aug 10 1994 10:22 | 3 |
| I heard that he overthrew 1st base - did Mo have any chance?
I saw Mo butcher one the other day, the leg may be that bad.
|
88.1712 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Melanie is two years old!! | Wed Aug 10 1994 10:24 | 4 |
| | I saw Mo butcher one the other day, the leg may be that bad.
I read in the newspaper this weekend that Mo will have his knee scoped either
this off season, or during strike time.
|
88.1713 | Rockies relievers are worse | BSS::MENDEZ | | Thu Aug 11 1994 13:16 | 5 |
| .1710
Pick any of the Rockies relievers. There is a song thats played on
850 koa radion. The song is about the sorry relievers on the Rockie
staff to the tune of "In the Ghetto". The name of the song is "In The
Bullpen".
|
88.1714 | | CAMONE::WAY | Hueys are way cool...Sir | Mon Aug 15 1994 10:18 | 14 |
| Sox pitching sucks and to me, it doesn't look to get any better any time
soon.
For me, the strike pretty much capped this season, so I've said, the hell
with it.
If I want baseball I'll go to New Britain or New Haven (nice field down
there btw) and see the AA clubs.
Football is coming, and soon after that Hockey will be following!
'Saw
|
88.1715 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Mon Aug 15 1994 10:40 | 12 |
|
|If I want baseball I'll go to New Britain or New Haven (nice field down
|there btw) and see the AA clubs.
Better get your tickts now - even double A games are selling out fast. I went
to the game in Pawtuckett a couple of weeks ago, and they had only a few seats
remaining for the rest of the home games.
=Bob=
BTW - I enjoyed the PawSox game better than the Red Sox game I went to earlier
in the season. Great place to go, just a kind of long drive for me.
|
88.1716 | | CAMONE::WAY | Hueys are way cool...Sir | Mon Aug 15 1994 10:47 | 12 |
| >Better get your tickts now - even double A games are selling out fast. I went
>to the game in Pawtuckett a couple of weeks ago, and they had only a few seats
>remaining for the rest of the home games.
Well, they are announcing on the radio that there are still tickets available,
so hopefully New Haven or New Britain are not ALL sold out yet.
There are a lot of regulars who go to those games who'll be pissed off by
the strike, I guess, if they can't get tickets.....
'Saw
|
88.1717 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Mon Aug 15 1994 10:57 | 14 |
|
|There are a lot of regulars who go to those games who'll be pissed off by
|the strike, I guess, if they can't get tickets.....
Yea, it was kinda funny the day we went. There were a couple of "old-timers"
sitting next to us. They knew all the players, and obviously went to a lot
of games. Contrasting them were the thousands of kids who were there. It was
a weekday game, and the PawSox made it "Youth Group Day". These kids did the
thing kids are supposd to do at ballparks - run around, yell, scream, eat, and,
oh, maybe watch a little baseball.
Great fun.
=Bob=
|
88.1718 | | 30008::ROBICHAUD | CasinoMania | Thu Sep 08 1994 18:22 | 1 |
| Okay, which one of you stole home plate from Fenway?
|
88.1719 | I did | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu Sep 08 1994 18:37 | 1 |
|
|
88.1720 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Fri Sep 09 1994 10:30 | 2 |
| Billy Hatcher?
|
88.1721 | See ya Butch | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Wed Sep 21 1994 10:58 | 10 |
| Wail the ol' Sox finally pulled the trigger, and canned Butch Hobson. He's
only the third manager in Red Sox history to have three consecutive losing
seasons. As a Sox fan, I don't think Hobson was a great manager, but I don't
think anyone could have won with the crew they've had the past couple of years.
Rumored replacements:
Tony LaRussa, Jim Leyland, Whitey Herzog, the third base coach form the Expos,
and a host of others.
=Bob=
|
88.1722 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pony Boy take me home... | Wed Sep 21 1994 12:08 | 9 |
| Yeah, you knew ol' Clell was gonna get the ax.
But I agree. The Red Sox talent has been of Washington Senatorial proportions
the last two seasons.
And I'm beginning to think this Duquette guy sucks as much as Jon Casey did....
'Saw
|
88.1723 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Yes I Am !!! | Wed Sep 21 1994 12:16 | 7 |
|
This mornings Globe listed all the past Red Sox managers and there
Career Red Sox Managing record. To find the last Red Sox manager to not
have a record over .500, you have to go back to 1966. Every manager
since then has a career record of over .500.
Ron
|
88.1724 | | ROCK::HUBER | Indians in '94 | Wed Sep 21 1994 14:01 | 14 |
|
Re .1722
>And I'm beginning to think this Duquette guy sucks as much as Jon Casey did...
Why?
Other than trading Quantril, what has he done that might hurt the
Sox in the future?
He looks to me to have started the long, slow process of rebuilding
the farm system quite nicely.
Joe
|
88.1725 | | CAMONE::WAY | No rest for the weary | Wed Sep 21 1994 14:19 | 23 |
| > Why?
>
> Other than trading Quantril, what has he done that might hurt the
> Sox in the future?
>
> He looks to me to have started the long, slow process of rebuilding
> the farm system quite nicely.
Well, for one thing, he was extremely difficult in the whole New
Britain/Springfield thing with Joe Buzas. Now we have a Twins farm team
instead of a Red Sox farm team, because Duquette wanted the team in
Springfield.
I've heard other grumblings about him too.
Don't get me wrong, I've seen the rebuilding process starting (with
much emphasis on the LONG and *SLOW* I think) and I'm pleased, but I don't
think he's all he's cracked up to be either....
'Saw
|
88.1726 | | 30008::ROBICHAUD | CasinoMania | Wed Sep 21 1994 14:24 | 11 |
| �Well, for one thing, he was extremely difficult in the whole New
�Britain/Springfield thing with Joe Buzas. Now we have a Twins farm team
How does this make him a bad GM?
�I've heard other grumblings about him too.
Like what?
/Don
|
88.1727 | | CAMONE::WAY | No rest for the weary | Wed Sep 21 1994 14:28 | 22 |
| |�Well, for one thing, he was extremely difficult in the whole New
|�Britain/Springfield thing with Joe Buzas. Now we have a Twins farm team
|
| How does this make him a bad GM?
If it ain't broke, don't fix it. I think he has other things to worry
about than what kind of kickbacks he's getting from the Springfield
contingent -- like where he's gonna find some real pitching...
|�I've heard other grumblings about him too.
|
| Like what?
|
Oh, just folks grousing about this pitcher or that player, stuff like
that. Nothing from any "official sources"....
Right now he's not very well liked in this area, for obvious reasons....
'Saw
|
88.1728 | | HANNAH::ASHE | Goofy's going to college | Wed Sep 21 1994 14:37 | 2 |
| The team wound up in Trenton NJ...
|
88.1729 | | CAMONE::WAY | No rest for the weary | Wed Sep 21 1994 14:46 | 10 |
| >
> The team wound up in Trenton NJ...
>
I hadn't heard that. He was sucking up to the folks in Springfield
very heavily......
'Saw
|
88.1730 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Wed Sep 21 1994 14:46 | 12 |
| I suspect that Beehive Field had something to do with
the decision to move the AA team. if I werre trying
to develop power hitters (Douquette says he likes
"power" players), I'd want my AA hitters to be in a
park where thyue could hit a few dingers to build their
confidence.
It appears the decision was for the good of the club,
so even though I've been to NB Sox games now and then,
I have no problem with the move.
=Bob=
|
88.1731 | | SCOONE::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Wed Sep 21 1994 14:52 | 5 |
| I heard that the team is going to Trenton for two
seasons, at the end of which the new park in
Springfield will be complete, and they will move there.
BTW Frank - how are those blisters?
|
88.1732 | When you say we want rebuilding, you gotta let him do it | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 21 1994 15:03 | 9 |
|
There's really not much basis for evaluation of Duquette at this point
one way or the other. He hasn't had so much as one complete off-season
to work from. The New Britain thing while regrettable to a certain
alleged part of New England ;-) is entirely irrelevant to the
development of the farm system.
glenn
|
88.1733 | | CAMONE::WAY | No rest for the weary | Wed Sep 21 1994 15:13 | 25 |
| > -< When you say we want rebuilding, you gotta let him do it >-
No gripes there.
> one way or the other. He hasn't had so much as one complete off-season
> to work from. The New Britain thing while regrettable to a certain
He alienated a lot of fans. Red Sox baseball has been down here for
quite a while.
Granted, New Britain does need a new park, and will get one, and they
could make the fences however they want.
But anyway......
re blisters:
Healing -- wouldn't be bad except they're all in the wrong
spots.....
|
88.1734 | new manager? | BSS::NEUZIL | Just call me Fred | Tue Oct 18 1994 18:43 | 6 |
|
Kevin Kennedy named as manager for the Red Sox. Recently canned by
Texas, I think.
Kevin
|
88.1735 | | CAMONE::WAY | Charge men, for God's sake, Charge! | Wed Oct 19 1994 10:12 | 2 |
| They're touting it as the shortest "firing-to-hiring" time of any manager
in recent memory......
|
88.1736 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | What a terrible year 1918 | Wed Oct 19 1994 10:28 | 3 |
|
Parade in October
|
88.1737 | | CAMONE::WAY | Charge men, for God's sake, Charge! | Wed Oct 19 1994 10:30 | 14 |
| >
> Parade in October
>
I hardly think so.
Granted, Butch was a problem -- couldn't handle his pitchers, couldn't
do a lot of things -- you know the routine.
But I don't think, with the talent level the Sox have now, that they
will be doing anything better just because they have a new manager....8^)
'Saw
|
88.1738 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Oct 19 1994 11:18 | 8 |
| I agree with 'Saw. If Dan Duquette can build a minor league organization like
the one he participated in up in Montreal then there will be parades in October
... well November actually ...
If Duquette fails to rebuild the Sox farm system then no manager will be able
to build what they've got into a champion.
George
|
88.1739 | Jose? | AIMHI::SMILLER | | Fri Nov 18 1994 07:50 | 5 |
|
What is this I hear.... Jose Conseco might be comming to Boston?
Steve
|
88.1740 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Devil's to pay! | Fri Nov 18 1994 08:47 | 5 |
|
> What is this I hear.... Jose Conseco might be comming to Boston?
Just what the Sox need -- another washed up, over the hill outfielder....8^)
|
88.1741 | Wait it out; in the post-nuclear era Cansecos will be given away | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Nov 18 1994 09:44 | 17 |
|
In the rumored deal, Scott Cooper and prospect Jose Malave could be
headed to Houston (which needs to move $4M man Doug Drabek) as part of
a three-way deal. Personally, while something like this would probably
improve the Sox for 1995, if it comes off I'll have serious doubts
about Dan Duquette's commitment, if not his sanity. If these teams
desperately need to move their $5M/year salaries (and they do), there's
no reason that a team like the Red Sox needs to be charitable about it.
Assume the risk by picking up the excessive salary and the emotional
baggage if necessary but leave it at that.
'Saw and I got to see Malave at New Britain this summer (as I recall,
he had a couple hits) and he's still probably the best pure hitter in
the system.
glenn
|
88.1742 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Devil's to pay! | Fri Nov 18 1994 10:00 | 10 |
| >
> 'Saw and I got to see Malave at New Britain this summer (as I recall,
> he had a couple hits) and he's still probably the best pure hitter in
> the system.
>
According to the Bagwell Theory, Malave should be traded away.....8^)
|
88.1743 | A righthanded, uppercutting, power hitter | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Mon Nov 21 1994 10:09 | 3 |
| Canseco might hit forty taters in his home park if he's traded to Boston.
Steve
|
88.1744 | We'll know tonight | AD::HEATH | Can the Pats duplilcate it??? | Thu Dec 08 1994 15:20 | 7 |
|
Just heard from a friend ex-deccie in Dallas and it is being
reported that Jose has left Dallas and is on route to Boston for
a press conference. Who knows.
Jerry
|
88.1745 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Thu Dec 08 1994 15:36 | 9 |
| Today's Canseco rumor is back to the Sox giving Otis Nixon
and Ken Ryan.
Personally, I don't like it - I think Ryan can be a solid
big league closer, and the Red Sox have nobody else. The
names I've heard bantied about as replacements are a bunch
or re-treads.
=Bob=
|
88.1746 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Dec 08 1994 15:51 | 14 |
| I agree it would be sad to lose Ryan, but maybe they can come up with someone
else later.
The Canseco trade will be good or bad depending on Conseco's health. He's had
back problems and a rotator cuff and hasn't really played a full season for a
few years.
As long as they can keep him off the mound and away from jet-ski accidents it
may work out. He really hits well in Fenway.
Also I believe the Sox picked up Luis Alicea from STL who is a really good
defensive 2B with an ok but not that great bat.
George
|
88.1747 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Thu Dec 08 1994 16:00 | 1 |
| later never comes with respect to Sox pitching.
|
88.1748 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Time for Vacation... | Thu Dec 08 1994 16:02 | 9 |
|
Its a done deal, Otis Nixon/Ken Ryan for Jose Canseco. Yesterday's
trade was Jeff McNeely/Nate Minchey for Luis Alicea of the Cardinals.
Alicea could be a 4 year Free Agent under the new Collective Bargaining
agreement. Alicea says that even if he becomes a Free Agent. He would
like to play in Boston. Duquette will get rid of Scott Cooper for ?,
making Naehring the 3rd baseman and Alicea the 2b.
Ron
|
88.1749 | Maybe Rodriguez | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Thu Dec 08 1994 16:08 | 4 |
| I hope the Red Sox aren't serioulsy relying on Tim
Naehring as an everyday player. That guy is the Tony
Eason of baseball. Look at him the wrong way, and he's
out for six weeks.
|
88.1750 | And they'll hope there is no salary cap! | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | We're #5 Baby; that's not too bad! | Thu Dec 08 1994 16:19 | 3 |
| Sox will sign John Wetteland as a free agent to be their closer.
NAZZ
|
88.1751 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Dec 08 1994 16:26 | 9 |
| I'm surprised they got rid of Otis Nixon so soon.
Is Trot Nixon ready for the majors? Seems like he'd be somewhere around AA
this year.
What do you bet they sign some defensive CF to hold them over until Trot
is ready?
George
|
88.1752 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Thu Dec 08 1994 16:27 | 3 |
| | Sox will sign John Wetteland as a free agent to be their closer.
As I said - retread...
|
88.1753 | I like it. Potential big impact; get to keep Malave, others | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Dec 08 1994 16:37 | 32 |
|
Even if there is a salary cap (and there likely will be, even in a
watered-down form), the Sox have quite a bit of room to work with
underneath it. With Canseco's $5M they are at about $20M guaranteed
(only Clemens, Greenwell and Canseco have big contracts) of a $40M cap.
Tim Naehring is a good guy to have around as an infield fill-in
who can rotate and play somewhere every day that he's healthy (as he
did last year). He really is a decent hitter, which is something that
the Sox can't afford to take lightly at this time.
My previous comments on this Canseco deal:
> When do they plan on buying out Nixon's contract? This trade goes
> against Dan Duquette's philosophy. He has already inquired about
> extending Jose's contract.
Sure, but Otis Nixon would have gone against Duquette's philosophy in
an even bigger way. So the deal boils down to Ken Ryan for at worst a
year of Canseco (you definitely do _not_ want to extend Canseco now, at
least not for more than a year, so this is fine-- more likely than not
if they ever resume playing, Duquette will be holding most of the cards).
I think it's reasonable. A gamble, but then again Ryan is fairly
erratic himself. He can be a very useful reliever, but probably never
the great frontline closer. I was much more concerned with the rumors
that had Ryan _and_ a potentially very good ML hitter in Jose Malave
going to Texas. Find even a marginal CF (go get Chad Curtis) and setup
man and this is an overall improvement to the team, without giving up
too much future.
glenn
|
88.1754 | Canseco,Wetteland,L.Walker...moves that could turn things fast | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Dec 08 1994 16:49 | 13 |
|
>| Sox will sign John Wetteland as a free agent to be their closer.
>
> As I said - retread...
Wetteland is not a retread. He's only 28 years old, and from almost
the day the Expos converted him to a full-time reliever three seasons
ago, he has been, in total, outstanding (105 saves). Had some shaky
outings last year, untouchable in 1993, but overall definitely someone
who has done the job.
glenn
|
88.1755 | | PCBUOA::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Thu Dec 08 1994 17:04 | 6 |
| What's the over/under on Canseco dingers next season.
Duquette's move is brilliant....Canseco will fill the
post-strike-season Fenway Park seats.
Mark.
|
88.1756 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Thu Dec 08 1994 17:09 | 1 |
| will they still chant "Sterrrrrrrrroids!"?
|
88.1757 | | PCBUOA::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Thu Dec 08 1994 17:17 | 4 |
| If he stays around long enough, Canseco will enjoy cult-hero status
unlike any other since Bill Lee.
Mark.
|
88.1758 | If he hits | AKOCOA::BREEN | NCAA: Noxious Cabal of Avarice and Arrogance | Thu Dec 08 1994 17:19 | 1 |
|
|
88.1759 | | MKFSA::LONG | | Fri Dec 09 1994 08:32 | 5 |
| Yunz are assuming they are even going to play next season. Canseco
may have a JaKe-like physique before they ever play MLB again.
billl
|
88.1760 | Oh if there really was a hot stove league | CSLALL::BRULE | go ahead with your own life leave me alone | Fri Dec 09 1994 08:35 | 8 |
| Don't get excited too fast. It looks like the O's now want Canseco.
The Sox may get Canseco today. But it depends on what the O's offer the
Rangers. Also if the Sox get Canseco they also will try to get Steve
Finley from the Astros to play CF. It's believed Duquette has that
trade done contingent on the Canseco deal being done and Nixon being
part of it.
Mike
|
88.1761 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Time for Vacation... | Fri Dec 09 1994 09:03 | 12 |
|
Are the O's getting nervous? In playing a we don't want you to
have hime, So we will trade for him? If the Sox get Canceco, the
apparantly have a deal with Houston for Steve Finley.
Which would leave the Sox in need of a Right Fielder and
pitching in all forms. The Sox payroll is only at 18M at the
moment. Adding Canceco would only and 2M (Otis makes 3.5M, this
year, while Jose makes 5.5). So if they money the right way. They
can get 4 guys for around 15M. Staying at about 35M for the season.
Which still gives them about 5M to play around with.
Ron
|
88.1762 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Dec 09 1994 09:35 | 14 |
| I don't think Right field is all that much of a problem. They could always
sign a free agent and if all else fails there's always Tom Brunansky who seems
to play well for the Sox. He'd be ok for someone hitting 6th behind Conseco,
Vaughn, and Valentin.
The real problem, as always, is pitching. It starts out good with Clemens and
Sele but I don't know if Bosio, Boskie, Hesketh sounds like the bottom half of
a championship starting rotation. And I realize we've all made this mistake
before but I figure Danny Darwin is pretty much overdue to turn into a pumpkin.
Did the PawSox win their division with any up and coming pitching talent or
did they do that by signing career AAA players?
George
|
88.1763 | | CTHQ::MCCULLOUGH | Hakuna Matata - means no worries... | Fri Dec 09 1994 09:47 | 12 |
| | Did the PawSox win their division with any up and coming pitching talent or
| did they do that by signing career AAA players?
Can't quite remember the PawSox starting rotation, but I
know that they started: Finvold, Minchey, VanEgamond,
F. Rodriguez, and Froworth among others. With the
exception of Rodrigueez, who may not be ready for nexted
season, they didn't seem to have anyone overpowering.
I'm curious what it will take to get Finley from Houston.
=Bob=
|
88.1764 | Re: many previous | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Fri Dec 09 1994 10:55 | 20 |
| If Canseco plays in Boston, the over/under on dingers is astronomic.
As for his becoming a cult figure comparable to Bill Lee, I'm not sure.
Lee was a child of his times, who entertained us by irritating figures
in authority (notably Bowie Kuhn, whose shirt was notoriously stuffed),
and getting away with it because he delivered on the mound.
Jose Canseco is a child of *his* times, a wonderfully gifted hitter (so
much so that he produces huge numbers without actually learning how to
hit) who thinks mostly about his personal numbers and was delighted to
get out of Oakland because of all that pressure to win.
He'll become a cult figure 1) if he hits, and 2) if he doesn't give any
interviews.
Has anyone heard if he's ready to go back to right field, where he has
already provided memorable footage for the blooper videos, or if he
has settled into a career as a DH?
Steve
|
88.1765 | | PTOS02::JACOBR | Red Dust and Spanish Lace | Fri Dec 09 1994 15:30 | 8 |
|
>>Yunz are assuming they are even going to play next season. Canseco
>>may have a JaKe-like physique before they ever play MLB again.
HEY, I resemble that remark!!!!
JaKe
|
88.1766 | | PTOSS1::JACOBR | When's training camp start??? | Thu Jan 19 1995 16:55 | 12 |
|
With all the former baseball players trying to come back to play
in the replacement games ie...Phil Niekro, Oil Can Boyd etc...
Did you hear that Ted Williams is seriously thinking about coming
back to play too!
It seems he still has his STROKE!! :-)
|
88.1767 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Free Whitey Bulger! | Thu Jan 19 1995 17:08 | 4 |
| Dr. Strangeglove would be a perfect DH. Glad to see the owners
aren't making a sideshow out of this.
/Don
|
88.1768 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Jan 20 1995 09:08 | 8 |
| According to the Boston Globe the Red Sox have been talking to some K.C.
Royals free agents. In particular they are talking to journeyman catcher Mike
Macfarlane and pitcher Kevin Appier.
Macfarlane hit .251 with 13 Home Runs last season while Appier went 6 and 6
with a 4.01 ERA.
George
|
88.1769 | Journeyman == well traveled | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Fri Jan 20 1995 09:10 | 6 |
|
Was "journeyman catcher" a quote from the article?
It's a pretty curious statement - Macfarlane has been
with the Royals since he broke into the majors, and that's
been at least 5 years.
|
88.1770 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Jan 20 1995 09:25 | 6 |
| No, "journeyman catcher" was my line. I realize that journeyman is suppose
to refer to someone who journeys around the league but I think of all thirty
something regular major league defensive .240-.250 types that play about half
the time as journeymen.
George
|
88.1771 | | CAMONE::WAY | Conspiring to make a mutiny... | Fri Jan 20 1995 10:44 | 6 |
| The official definition of journeyman is
one who has mastered a trade and works
in another's employ. A competant worker.
'Saw
|
88.1772 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Jan 20 1995 10:51 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1771 by CAMONE::WAY "Conspiring to make a mutiny..." >>>
> one who has mastered a trade and works
> in another's employ. A competant worker.
I think this is from the old days of trades where someone went from
apprentice to journeyman to master
as in apprentice carpenter, journeyman carpenter, master carpenter.
Maybe that's where baseball's journeyman comes from. Players sort of break
down into:
rookie, journeyman, star
although there seem to be many who use the term journeyman to refer to a
thirtyish regular but not spectacular player who plays on a lot of different
teams during his career.
George
|
88.1773 | | CAMONE::WAY | Conspiring to make a mutiny... | Fri Jan 20 1995 10:55 | 8 |
| > I think this is from the old days of trades where someone went from
>
> apprentice to journeyman to master
Yes, I remember reading that somewhere.....
I guess when you're a master, you kind of have your own business, and
then you can employ journeymen....8^)
|
88.1774 | | TOOK::HALPIN | Steelers join the Browns in the Wait-til-next-year Club!!! | Fri Jan 20 1995 13:42 | 21 |
|
>> one who has mastered a trade and works
>> in another's employ. A competant worker.
>
> I think this is from the old days of trades where someone went from
>
> apprentice to journeyman to master
>
>as in apprentice carpenter, journeyman carpenter, master carpenter.
Gee, I'll have to call my younger brother and tell him that his
Journeyman's Electrician License is nothing but an artifact
of the "old days". And the several years he spent as an
Electrician's Apprentice was a waste of time too!!! The class
room hours, the tests, all useless....
JimH :-)
|
88.1775 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | It's all in the outcome | Fri Jan 20 1995 16:29 | 10 |
| Neither are hardly journeymen. Both are much in demand and the big
bucks they are demanding is the only thing making them expendable.
The Catching postion is the most difficult to assess as statitics are
mostly useless. A catcher's Batting Ave. often is depressed because of
his concentration on running the game and the latter is very difficult
to assess unless you're at the game all the time.
Glenn at least could give you the scouting/gm assessment on these guys;
Gammon seems to like them both fwiw
|
88.1776 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Fri Jan 20 1995 16:34 | 1 |
| I also like Macfarlane, but it depends what he's asking.
|
88.1777 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Garrett > Aikman | Mon Jan 23 1995 08:48 | 7 |
|
Haaaaa H Ha Ha Ha
Good one Jakester!!!
|
88.1778 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Mon Jan 23 1995 09:09 | 7 |
|
The reason I called out the "MacFarlane/journeyman?" thing was because
he *is* fairly well in demand. A good power hitter by catcher standards,
good for 13-17 homers in about 400 at-bats. Don't know how well he calls
a game or throws out runners, though - I haven't seen enough of him...
Roland
|
88.1779 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Jan 23 1995 09:21 | 9 |
| On the other hand, he never really nailed down the starting catchers job at
KC. Over the last few years he's started more often than anyone else but Brent
Mayne seems to have started more than a backup catcher's share and seems to be
the heir apparent.
Macfarlane is good, but I don't think he'll have to worry about canceling his
mid season plans to make a trip to the all-star game any time soon.
George
|
88.1780 | Inquiring minds and all that!!!!!!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | I Love the Dorito's Babies.... | Thu Apr 06 1995 09:35 | 7 |
|
Anyone know what # Wetteland will be wearing for the Sox this year?
Chap
|
88.1781 | our man Roger | AGNT99::CHILDS | End Corporate Welfare Instead! | Thu Apr 06 1995 09:40 | 9 |
|
What a dilemma for Glenn. If the Soxs win it all, his main man retires.
I especially enjoyed the part of the interview where he insituated that
all the A and AA players who were going to be replacement players were
drug or booze addicts..........
I got admit I'm glad he's back to shoot from the hip......
mike
|
88.1782 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | I Love the Dorito's Babies.... | Thu Apr 06 1995 09:51 | 8 |
|
So Glen give us your "objective" feelings about the Wetteland
trade?
Chap
|
88.1783 | Dan - Don't just stand there. DO SOMETHING!!! | WMOIS::FASSETT_E | Nothing beats a Bud MAN!!! | Fri Apr 07 1995 11:12 | 8 |
| Hey Chappy - Now that the Yankees have WETland you must be dreaming
about a World Championship for your Yankees.
It must be called a WET dream!!!
FAST EDDIE
P.S. It wouldn't hurt so much if he had gone to anybody but the Yankees
|
88.1784 | Look for the Sox and Tigers to battle for the cellar | AD::HEATH | Pitchers and catchers report when??? | Fri Apr 07 1995 13:12 | 6 |
|
Anything less than a Championship must be considered a monumental
choke for the Yankmees now with Wetteland on board uh Chappy.
Jerry
|
88.1785 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Apr 07 1995 13:32 | 16 |
| I'm pretty psyched about the possibility of seeing Canseco and Vaughn hitting
back to back. I was kind of hoping the BoSox would get Marquis Grissom but it
doesn't look like that's going to happen now that he's gone to the Braves. Dan
Dequette (sp?) told the Globe he wouldn't trade for Grissom because he doesn't
feel he can sign him at the end of the year.
There still seems to be a couple holes in the outfield and they could use
a good leadoff man. As for pitching the BoSox have a good 1-2 punch with
Clemens and Sele but then it drops off.
One rumor the Globe had was that Kennedy was trying to work a deal to get
Pudge Rodriguez from Texas. Sounds like it would be hard to pull off but it
would be great if they found a way to do it. Otherwise we probably get Rolands
(?) who's 27 going on 31 and and Wedge working behind the plate
George
|
88.1786 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | End Corporate Welfare Instead! | Fri Apr 07 1995 13:36 | 7 |
|
Doquette couldn't trade for Grissom casue he couldn't match the Braves'
offer. Imo the Braves overpaid for Grissom but hey it's not the first
time they've done it. Especially when you consider Roberto's numbers
vs Grissom's.........
mike
|
88.1787 | | SALEM::DODA | Donald Fehr, man of intransigence | Fri Apr 07 1995 13:37 | 6 |
| Rodriguez may be available since Texas has Salen NH native Dean
Borrelli waiting in AAA.
Rowland is a stiff.
daryll
|
88.1788 | one righty, one lefty | MKOTS3::LONG | Spring has sprung, grass has riz | Fri Apr 07 1995 13:41 | 7 |
| From all the reports regarding Clemens' girth the Sox might
look into some innovative laser surgery that could net them
two Rogers.
billl
|
88.1789 | 0-fer-2 | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Apr 07 1995 15:42 | 7 |
| >I was kind of hoping the BoSox would get Marquis Grissom but it
>doesn't look like that's going to happen now that he's gone to the Braves. Dan
>Dequette (sp?) told the Globe he wouldn't trade for Grissom because he doesn't
>feel he can sign him at the end of the year.
CNN reported that Boston WAS in the bidding for Grissom, but they didn't
offer as much as Atlanta.
|
88.1790 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Pickerel SS-177, On Eternal Patrol | Mon Apr 10 1995 08:25 | 5 |
| Is this trade they made over the weekend any good? I'm not familiar
with the players they got. I know they got rid of Cooper and a pitcher.
'Saw
|
88.1791 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Money + Boredom = MJ | Mon Apr 10 1995 09:43 | 15 |
|
I think its a decent trade for the Sox. As with any trade, it can
look bad or look good. Depending on the production you get out of
the players you receive.
Mark Whiten is a switch hitting right fielder. Who can hit for
power. He also has an arm like a cannon. So don't look for people
scoring from second on a base hit to right field. Whiten gives them
the protection in the lineup for Jose, and Mo Vaughn.
Rheal Cormier is a left handed pitcher. Who hopefully can give
them some innings as a 4th or 5th starter. If not he will be used
for long relief.
It was a good trade for both teams. Cooper goes to his home town
team. Which has always been a dream of his.
Ron
|
88.1792 | not bad, especially with Ortiz waiting... | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Mon Apr 10 1995 10:05 | 12 |
|
Whiten definitely takes care of defense in RF. If the Red Sox start the
season with him in right and Tinsley in center, their only outfield liability
will be Mike "The Adventure" Greenwell. And, as said earlier, he has a
*tremendous* arm. Being a switch-hitter definitely doesn't hurt. I think
Cooper was a right-handed hitter - I recall seeing that one of the pluses
of the trade was that it makes the Sox "less right-handed".
Cormier is one of those guys who seems to look good the first time around
the league, then gets caught up to. Middle relief may be where he ends up.
Roland
|
88.1793 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Apr 10 1995 10:21 | 28 |
| The Sox have also picked up Catcher Mike Macfarlane from KCR and last fall
they picked up Luis Alicea from StLouis to play 2nd base. Today they announced
that they picked up Reggie Jefferson . In theory he's a switch hitting 1st
baseman but in reality he's a left handed DH.
So as far as I can tell the offense currently lines up something like this
(I wonder who will lead off?).
C Mike Macfarlane
C Eric Wedge
1B Mo Vaughn
2B Luis Alicea
SS John Valentin
3B Tim Naehring
CI Reggie Jefferson
MI Who Knows
LF Mike Greenwell
CF Lee Tinsley
RF Mark Whiten
O4 Up For
O5 Grabs
DH Jose Canseco
George
|
88.1794 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Money + Boredom = MJ | Mon Apr 10 1995 11:30 | 19 |
|
The line-up should look something like this.
1) Luis Alicia 2b
2) John Valentin SS
3) Jose Canseco DH
4) Mo Vaughn 1B
5) Mark Whiten RF
6) Tim Naehring 3B (Could be Terry Shumpert)
7) Mike Greenwell LF
8) Lee Tinsley CF
9) Mike McFarlane C
Kevin Kennedy has already said Alicia will lead off, with Valentin,
Jose and Mo to follow. So the top 4 are cast in concrete at the moment.
This team will live and die with its starting pitching. They should be
able to put up some decent offensive numbers.
Ron
|
88.1795 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Apr 10 1995 12:46 | 5 |
| Luis Alicea doesn't walk all that much for a sub .250 hitter and he only had
3 stolen bases last year. In 170 at bats he only walked 24 times. Strange kind
of lead off hitter.
George
|
88.1796 | | SALEM::DODA | Donald Fehr, man of intransigence | Mon Apr 10 1995 16:50 | 4 |
| What's happened to Bill Hasselman? They signed him to a contract
during the winter.
daryll
|
88.1797 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Don'tCallMeFishRookie! | Mon Apr 10 1995 17:57 | 9 |
| Mike Childs is going to love this one. Had a few beers with my
brother's friend last Friday night and he does a lot of volunteer work for
the Jimmy Fund. He said that Roger Clemens was the most obnoxious least
cooperative of anybody in the Red Sox organization he's ever dealt with.
He said Roger wouldn't ever do anything unless he gets money for his time.
Matter of fact he went on to say that the only person even close to being
as bad as Roger was Roger's wife!
/Don
|
88.1798 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Apr 10 1995 23:07 | 14 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1797 by DZIGN::ROBICHAUD "Don'tCallMeFishRookie!" >>>
>He said that Roger Clemens was the most obnoxious least
>cooperative of anybody in the Red Sox organization he's ever dealt with.
>He said Roger wouldn't ever do anything unless he gets money for his time.
>Matter of fact he went on to say that the only person even close to being
>as bad as Roger was Roger's wife!
Oh nuts, me and Roger. That's two of us.
Tell me that the rest of you guys donate hours each week stuffing envelopes
for the Jimmy Fund or dishing out food at the Green Street Inn.
George
|
88.1799 | owners suck part 345 | CNTROL::CHILDS | End Corporate Welfare Instead! | Tue Apr 11 1995 09:58 | 8 |
|
geez tell me something I don't already know will ya????????
;^)
Like why isn't Fehr and the boys screaming colusuion over these low salaries?
mike
|
88.1800 | again, who was this strike for ? | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Apr 11 1995 10:23 | 4 |
| > Like why isn't Fehr and the boys screaming colusuion over these low salaries?
What does Fehr say to all those at Camp Unemployment (Homestead, FL)
who will see their careers end because of the strike ???
|
88.1801 | | PTOSS1::JACOBR | | Tue Apr 11 1995 11:38 | 4 |
| Fehr will laugh all the way to the bank, cause his job is secure.
JaKe
|
88.1802 | Exactly what they wanted | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Tue Apr 11 1995 12:18 | 11 |
| > Like why isn't Fehr and the boys screaming colusuion over these low
salaries?
Because some of these poor owners are still signing the Walkers and
other top Free Agents to ridiculous contracts. But look at it another
way. Navarro signed for 800k I believe for this year. Last year he had
a 6+ ERA. Why was he even signed for that much?
The players are getting exactly what they asked for. But they aren't
going to get what they wanted. The gap in player salaries will be huge!
Mike
|
88.1803 | Fans don't want, wouldn't know it if they saw it: Excellence | AKOCOA::BREEN | The Smell of the Magnolias | Tue Apr 11 1995 13:04 | 21 |
| One point that hasn't been mentioned anywhere (for some reason?) is
that baseball ownership is saving 11% with the 144 game season(/162).
That's about 5 mil per club. Unless ownership is paying full season
salaries which is totally unlikely - they get full network tv revenue,
however (again, that's seemingly a certainty).
Also, the "losses" from last year are all workable and can be carried
over to future profits which may be forthcoming from the lower costs:
that 11 %, the PR factor (or the Duquington factor of turning down free
agents "because of the strike poverty") and expansion fees.
Couple all that with the mental incapacity of fans to picture ownership
as the driving, negative force which may enable mlb to try another
lockout (calling a spade) spun by mlb as a strike.
The irony of the whole situation is that Capenomics probably could
benefit the majority of players the most.. ie the strike for the principle
of awarding excellence vs nfl of awarding solid mediocrity may not have
been the best strategy.
billte
|
88.1804 | just trying to keep my mind open... | MKOTS3::LONG | Spring has sprung, grass has riz | Tue Apr 11 1995 15:49 | 40 |
| re .1803:
Pardon me, there Billy boy, but that reply reeks of "If you
disagree with me you must be an idiot!". I'm sure you didn't
intend that.
The whole concept of professional sports, in all sports, is
headed in this same direction. From the fans perspective they
all want, make that DEMAND, a championship caliber team. Nothing
else is acceptable. They complain if owners don't get into the
bidding wars for the best talent. Then they complain if the
owners spend an un-godly amount and then don't win it all.
Heaven forbid the owners pass some of that increased expense
along at the ticket window.
Then there's the owners don't see themselves as participating in
a piece of Amercana rich in tradition. To most it is a business
where profits are to be maximized, and expenses limited, nothing
more. If I had to invest hundreds of millions, I can't even
fathom that, of dollars to get into a business I'd probably have
the same point of view. We ain't talkin' chump change here.
Last, but not least, there's the players. As kids we all dreamt of
getting paid to play something that we'd play for hours for free,
or at least until Mom called us for the third time for dinner. We
cherished our heros' cardboard pictures. And we make noisemakers
on our bicycle spokes of all the Phillies. (Yankees for you Red Sox
fans) But now that we've matured, and are trying to make a living of
our own, we can understand why if the Altanta Braves are willing to
offer your local star $10 million, he'd take it with a smile. That
doesn't make him greedy, just another good business decision. But
to me when these millionaires feel they have to ban together to make
sure the owners don't (ban together), they are helping to make a
mockery of the institution.
I'll get off my soapbox now. I just wanted to try and explain why
I want no part of the "owners are scum, players are angels" bandwagon.
billl
|
88.1805 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Apr 11 1995 15:51 | 6 |
| > Couple all that with the mental incapacity of fans to picture ownership
> as the driving, negative force which may enable mlb to try another
> lockout (calling a spade) spun by mlb as a strike.
I love this kind of pro-union talk....the union went on strike 'cause
ownership *forced* them to. I mean, they had no choice !
|
88.1806 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Tue Apr 11 1995 16:32 | 6 |
|
From the Red Sox File
DD has just signed free agent RH pitcher Erik Hanson, formerly of
Cincinnatti Reds.
No other details yet. Anyone got his stats? BillM
|
88.1807 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Tue Apr 11 1995 16:42 | 4 |
| If this is the same guy who was with Seattle, he has the best
curveball in the game..........when it works.
Jimbo
|
88.1808 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Tue Apr 11 1995 16:44 | 3 |
|
Here we go!!! Parade in October.
|
88.1809 | RE: E. Hanson | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Tue Apr 11 1995 16:45 | 3 |
|
Last year he had a .500 record, with a 4.11 ERA. Least that's what the
paper says...
|
88.1810 | Mental incapacity not really in this note, more in public domain | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Apr 11 1995 18:32 | 31 |
| Poor choice of words Billl? Perhaps comprehension is better. Perhaps
my not caring as much as others at the missing postseason. And yes I
do know ballplayers are spoiled and the owners spoiled them and now
want to change the arrangement. And if I was advising the players I'd
have pulled off a cap deal, problem is however foolish the union did
make a decision. My frustration is in reading how the owners had a
choice (to implement a cap) and players did not have a choice.
Here is what I truly believe in regards to the whole thing:
The owners followed a strategy in 1994 that HAD to result in the
loss of the post-season (since effectively the players had the stronger
1994 position).
The owners now felt that they had two objectives: the original cap
and now recouping from players the maximum in game-checks.
Following this strategy had only one result and that was screwing
baseball and the fans... and finally
The entire denouement of the situation was entirely predictable
from the owners side from the beginning ie If we pursue this course of
action (unilateral imposition of their demands) it will result in
serious damage to baseball but some years down the line will increase
out net profits, if we act more reasonably we can preserve baseball for
the fans but it will result in less profits.
To the owners chagrin the strategy was ruled illegal but to the
fans chagrin the judicial process says "Show me damage first then I'll
decide if someone acts wrongly".
Am I pro-union for saying this? Not necessarily, I'm just pro logical
reasoning and anti media brainwashing (c my earlier reference to Bob
Ryan's pro owner diatribe).
|
88.1811 | | MKOTS3::LONG | Spring has sprung, grass has riz | Wed Apr 12 1995 09:29 | 18 |
| >Am I pro-union for saying this? Not necessarily, I'm just pro logical
>reasoning and anti media brainwashing (c my earlier reference to Bob
>Ryan's pro owner diatribe).
There you go again, Bill. If I agree with you I have to power of
"logical reasoning". Otherwise I'm affected by "media brainwashing".
The actions of owners, players and the media have not changed my
feelings for the institution of baseball. It's still my personal
favorite as far as spectator sports go. However, my attitude towards
all _three_ parties has gone through a drastic metamorphosis. I'll
never again pay a dime for things like baseball cards, autographs
or team memorabilia. I'll still go to as many games as I can and
cheer a _team_ on, but the individuals can all go pound sand for
the damage they've all done to the American Pastime.
billl
|
88.1812 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Money + Boredom = MJ | Wed Apr 12 1995 10:28 | 8 |
|
The paper says that Erik Hanson is an innings pitcher. So the
Sox starters are now Clemens, Sele, F. Rodriquez, Hanson, and Cormeir.
DD inquired about getting Randy Johnson from Seattle. Seattle wants
Aaron Sele in return. Needless to say Boston isn't going to trade
Sele away for Johnson.
Ron
|
88.1813 | you always can tell those guys who spent time with the jevvies | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Apr 12 1995 10:48 | 13 |
| No, when I say I'm anti media-brainwashing I am literally against an
article like Ryan's which was "non-logical".
As far as logic=me etc; If that's the effect then I'm guilty, but what
I'm really trying to say is so much natural anger is directed at the
players, those defending them seem less emotional therefore (not
necessarily, mea culpa again) more logical.
And finally, once more, when I defend the players right to strike I
don't necessarily agree with the judgement used by them and lack of
communication skills.
billte
|
88.1814 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Apr 12 1995 11:23 | 14 |
| > The owners followed a strategy in 1994 that HAD to result in the
> loss of the post-season (since effectively the players had the stronger
> 1994 position).
> The entire denouement of the situation was entirely predictable
Bzzzzzztttt ! No basis for this 'logical deduction'. No historical
precedent or evidence at the time to support that the players' knew
their strike would result in the owners' cancelling the post-season.
"Insiders" say that this 'denouement' was a sign of union miscalculation,
and not something that was predictable. Therefore, since one of the
two parties in this battle did not expect the result, it could not have
been an obvious strategy with only one possible result.
|
88.1815 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Apr 12 1995 11:26 | 19 |
| Here's Erik Hanson's stats for last year at Cinci:
Name ERA W L SV IP H BB SO Ratio R ER HR G GS CG GF SH
Erik Hanson 4.247 5 5 0. 110.2 130 21 89 1.37 56 52 9 20 19 0 1 0.
... and here's his stats for 1993 with Seattle.
Name ERA W L SV IP H BB SO R ER HR G GS CG GF SH
Erik Hanson 3.474 11 12 0 215.0 215 60 163 91 83 17 31 30 7 0 0
Last year he had roughly 5.5 innings per start. In 1993 he had roughly 7.1
innings per start. Not exactly a strike out king but not bad control either.
He seems to walk only 1 or 2 guys a game.
According to Bill James he had a torn anterior cruciate ligament last year
what ever that is. James says that with his walk to strike out ratio being
as good as it is the rest of his game should follow but some people are getting
frustrated waiting.
George
|
88.1816 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Snook SS-279, On Eternal Patrol | Wed Apr 12 1995 12:00 | 16 |
| > According to Bill James he had a torn anterior cruciate ligament last year
>what ever that is. James says that with his walk to strike out ratio being
>as good as it is the rest of his game should follow but some people are getting
>frustrated waiting.
Anterior cruciate ligaments is one of the ligaments in the knee.
There are two ligaments in there that form a cross (oh, anatomy courses
don't fail me) when viewed from, uh, uh, er, behind. That's why they
call them cruciate ligaments.
This is a very common, it would seem, athlete's injury, more familiarly
referred to as a torn acl.
'Saw
|
88.1817 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Wed Apr 12 1995 12:05 | 8 |
| > There are two ligaments in there that form a cross (oh, anatomy courses
> don't fail me) when viewed from, uh, uh, er, behind. That's why they
> call them cruciate ligaments.
Anterior Cruciate Ligament and Posterior Cruciate Ligament form the
cross.
|
88.1818 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Apr 12 1995 12:07 | 5 |
| So what's the recovery time from this sort of injury?
How threatening is it to a pitchers career?
George
|
88.1819 | Players postion was a given | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Apr 12 1995 12:20 | 19 |
| No I don't think the players knew or even thought about the strike
causing cancellation of post-season, my assumption is they thought the
owners would cave in rather than cancel. But when the players struck
to preclude a walkout the owners had two choices, agree not to lockout
and continue to bargain or forego the postseason.
The rest is history. My argument is given the players "field position"
the owners going for the td wasn't logical and the only result could be
the screwing of the fans. If you credit the owners with normal
business acumen then the conclusion should be that in order to
restructure their business they were willing to stop baseball for up to
a year including post-season. I don't criticize them for not taking
politics into consideration (eg the court decision and legal
ramifications forestalling their strategy).
And I have a note to that effect written last august when logic seemed
to dictate a short strike to trade no-lockout for something else.
Billte
|
88.1820 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Snook SS-279, On Eternal Patrol | Wed Apr 12 1995 12:21 | 19 |
| >
> So what's the recovery time from this sort of injury?
>
> How threatening is it to a pitchers career?
It depends on how bad the tear was, how much surgery is required.
I'm far from an expert, but I believe that small tears, that don't completely
sever the ligament, can be repaired with arthroscopic surgery. A large
or complete tear would be move involved. I'd have to ask my brother, he's
the OR expert and has done several rotations in ortho.
There's also a lot of rehab involved, strengthening the knee.
I don't think it would threaten a pitcher as much as, say a running back,
but legs are awfully important to a pitcher.....
'Saw
|
88.1821 | 7 months minimum | MARIN::DODGE | | Wed Apr 12 1995 14:45 | 19 |
| I tore my Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) and had reconstuctive
surgery. Up until the last 5 years or so, an ACL injury was career
ending. Now with advances in othroscopy they can do the surgery in
a much less invasive manner and get better results.
The rehab period is a minimum of 7 months and more likely 12 months.
It can take another complete season before the athlete feels completely
healed and at full strength.
Depending on which knee it was it could be deadly to a pitcher. If he
is a right hander and it was his left knee..... big trouble. The
converse is true of left handers. Think about it. A pitcher puts all
his weight on one leg and then twists that leg during the wind up, and
finally pushes off on it just as he releases the ball. Believe me,
that is incredible stress to put on a knee that has had ACL surgery.
Anybody know which knee it was and if he is a right hander or left ?
|
88.1822 | | GENRAL::WADE | Ah'm Yo Huckleberry... | Thu Apr 13 1995 12:46 | 5 |
|
Well, I thought about it. I'm a rightie and I push off with
my right leg.
Claybone
|
88.1823 | timing's everything | MKOTS3::LONG | Spring has sprung, grass has riz | Wed Apr 26 1995 11:01 | 7 |
| wouldn't ya now it! I'm just in my second week of a new job and
I get a call at 11pm last night offering me a ticket to the Sox
opening day today. :(
billl
|
88.1824 | | PCBUOA::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Wed Apr 26 1995 12:51 | 4 |
| Send mail to me if you want to be on my distribution list for Red Sox
updates.
Mark.
|
88.1825 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Apr 26 1995 13:37 | 16 |
| The Boston Globe had the Red Sox opening day lineup. It went something
like:
2B Luis Alicea
SS John Valentin
DH Jose Canseco
1B Mo Vaughn
RF Mark Whiten
LF Mike Greenwell
C Mike Macfarlane
3B Tim Naehring
CF Lee Tinsley
P Aaron Sele
George
|
88.1826 | updates | MROA::RSCHOTT | | Wed Apr 26 1995 15:51 | 6 |
| Mark:
If it's not too late, please put me on your distribution for Red
Sox updates. Thanks. MROA::RSchott.
Russ
|
88.1827 | disregard .1826 | MROA::RSCHOTT | | Wed Apr 26 1995 16:02 | 7 |
| Re: .1824
"Please send mail if ............"
Hey, reading comprehension was never a strength.
Russ
|
88.1828 | | PCBUOA::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Wed Apr 26 1995 17:20 | 3 |
| Sox beat the Twins 9-0 on a combined 2-hitter.
Mark.
|
88.1829 | starting off 1-0 instead of 0-1 | MR1PST::THEKGB::MBROOKS | | Thu Apr 27 1995 10:47 | 1 |
| Good thing Clemons wasnt inthere :-)
|
88.1830 | Who dat in first place? | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 15 1995 10:16 | 10 |
|
Hey Chap, how was your weekend?! Mine was pretty good. Round about
the 9th inning yesterday, BelindaStandardTime, I was starting to feel
a little sick, but by the time my daughter Becky left the park with a
Mike Macfarlane HR ball in her pocket I knew that all was again right
with the world. Many people left Fenway happy yesterday but none
more so than that little girl...
glenn
|
88.1831 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon May 15 1995 11:02 | 7 |
| Wow, you got the ball?
Guess you sit out in the CF bleachers.
Did she get it on the fly or on the bounce?
George
|
88.1832 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Largato SS-371, In Memoriam | Mon May 15 1995 11:22 | 6 |
| Congrats to Becky there Glenn.
Sounds like a GREAT day at the park.....a GREAT day.
'Saw
|
88.1833 | Way to go, Becky!!! | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944 | Mon May 15 1995 11:38 | 3 |
| I am GREEN with envy.
Steve
|
88.1834 | 16 down, 128 to go.... | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon May 15 1995 14:50 | 3 |
| > -< Who dat in first place? >-
Glad to see your schedule has let up a bit Glenn....
|
88.1835 | | ONOFRE::MAY_BR | Mich fightsong=1bourbon,1scotch &1beer | Mon May 15 1995 17:41 | 5 |
| > Glad to see your schedule has let up a bit Glenn....
Obviously his workload has shifted over to Chappy.
brews
|
88.1836 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Mon May 15 1995 17:45 | 11 |
|
Chappy's been ill.
What do you want me too say? They lost 2-3 to the sox? Injuries
aren't and excuse because both teams have them?
There doin it with mirrors boys! Don't get your hopes up!!
Chap
|
88.1837 | | WMOIS::MAZURKA | Son_Of_One_Who_Likes_To_Ramble. | Tue May 16 1995 17:34 | 9 |
| The Boy's Tounge_Tied. :_)
I work Back_To_Back with Chap and He's My Bud...But we're both Lookin
Forward to August when they meet again in Friendly_Fenway.
I went to the Game Saturday and Fenway wasn't so Friendly to Boggs.
Man...Did he get Razzed!You could see it Effected him.I almost felt
Sorry fer him.
Crazy_NOT!_Al
|
88.1838 | FYI | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Wed May 17 1995 08:29 | 5 |
| Mo Vaughn hit 2 dingers last night as the Sox beat the
Brewers 5-0. That gives Mo 10 homers now and he leads
the bigs in that department. Vaughn has hit a home run
in 9 of the Sox 17 games so far this season.
|
88.1839 | watxh out Marris here comes Mo | CNTROL::CHILDS | Harry Browne in 96 | Wed May 17 1995 08:56 | 5 |
|
Looks like Mo's got his hands wrapped around a corked bat........
mike
|
88.1840 | Go MO | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Wed May 17 1995 09:44 | 5 |
| Jose who? It looks like Canseco and his 5.1 million will be going
on the 15 day disabled list. Paul Quantrill who was traded to
Philly last year for Wes Chamberlain is pitching well, the last I
knew he was 3-0 . . . BIG mistake getting rid of him, atleast he's
pitching in the National League.
|
88.1841 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 17 1995 10:53 | 7 |
| Not only is Mo hitting the long ball, his batting average is coming up
as well.
Too bad about Jose. He said something to the effect that he doesn't mind
playing with one injury but playing with 3 of them is too much.
George
|
88.1842 | corked or helpful tips???? | BIGQ::WEST | Kevin 225-4528 HLO | Wed May 17 1995 13:57 | 13 |
|
reply .1839
Mikey not a corked bat but maybe a few Steroids from Jose????
:-)..../westy
ps....or some batting tips from our local slugger Slim Jimbo Mckay!!
:-) can't forget this smiley plus JJ has hand on the corked so Mo
can't get there.....
|
88.1843 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 17 1995 14:05 | 9 |
| Mo's always been able to hit the long ball. He hit it in highschool, all
through the minors, and when he 1st came up in the majors.
Shortly after he came up the major league pitchers realized that he couldn't
hit curve balls so he got a steady diet of breaking stuff. But now that he's
learned to spoil or even hit that stuff the other way they have to go back to
mixing it up and he's getting pitches he can hit for home runs.
George
|
88.1844 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Wed May 17 1995 17:54 | 3 |
88.1845 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Thu May 18 1995 10:12 | 5 |
| West, SCREW!!!
Jimbo
|
88.1846 | Smile Jimbo, RedSox are winning for you | BIGQ::WEST | Kevin 225-4528 HLO | Thu May 18 1995 10:50 | 8 |
|
OOOOOOOCH!!!!!!! Geez Jimbo what got you fired up??? I even gave you
a compliment saying SlimJIM.....or was it the hitting tips??
What happened Groaner strike you out???
*-) westy
|
88.1847 | I 2nd that, Jimbo! | CNTROL::SALMON | | Thu May 18 1995 16:03 | 8 |
| WEST:
I 2nd Jimbo's SCREW!
JJS
|
88.1848 | WOW | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Fri May 19 1995 08:57 | 4 |
| RED SOX . . . . . 4
INDIANS . . . . . 3
The Red Sox make it 5 straight and 10th in their last 11 games.
|
88.1849 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Fri May 19 1995 09:16 | 4 |
88.1850 | MacFarlane da main! | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 19 1995 13:50 | 1 |
|
|
88.1851 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri May 19 1995 15:21 | 5 |
| MacFarlane's doing great. I just hope some time goes by before the road
runner walks up in front of him and points down. He's good but he's not this
good.
George
|
88.1852 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri May 19 1995 16:00 | 4 |
| >runner walks up in front of him and points down. He's good but he's not this
>good.
True for the team in general.
|
88.1853 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Fri May 19 1995 16:47 | 6 |
88.1854 | | SALEM::DODA | Improvise, adapt, overcome | Fri May 19 1995 17:00 | 4 |
| I'd certainly stick Leyritz at the bottom of the list. Has this
guy thrown out anyone this year?
daryll
|
88.1855 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Fri May 19 1995 17:06 | 4 |
88.1856 | HTH's | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Fri May 19 1995 17:17 | 8 |
|
Yes Leyritz threw out Tom Goodwin of the Royals.
Chap
|
88.1857 | | SALEM::DODA | Improvise, adapt, overcome | Fri May 19 1995 17:24 | 5 |
| Well there you go, he has thrown someone out this season.
He's pathetic behind the plate, period.
daryll
|
88.1858 | | SALEM::DODA | Improvise, adapt, overcome | Fri May 19 1995 17:33 | 6 |
| Goodwin has what 4 steals this year vs being caught something
like 6 times.
That Tom Goodwin?
daryll
|
88.1859 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Fri May 19 1995 17:38 | 6 |
| I go along with Carlton Fisks comment that throwing out baserunners is
the most overrated catcher skill there is. Most can do it if pitcher
and 1b are doing their job. Having a lefthanded firstbaseman probably
makes a bigger difference than the skill of the catcher.
MacFarlane is obviously doing the job.
|
88.1860 | | SALEM::DODA | Improvise, adapt, overcome | Fri May 19 1995 17:46 | 5 |
| What's Tony Pena hitting these days?
His weight?
daryll
|
88.1861 | | MKOTS3::LONG | Life is better left to chance. | Fri May 19 1995 17:51 | 5 |
| MacFarlane makes every shot to the outfield look like there's
a gale force wind blowing. Makes up with his bat.
billl
|
88.1862 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri May 19 1995 17:51 | 14 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1860 by SALEM::DODA "Improvise, adapt, overcome" >>>
What's Tony Pena hitting these days?
Not much. Here's what he had last time we got numbers. It may have come
up a few points but not much.
CLE Indians Batters G AB R H TB D T HR RBI BB SO SB CS E Avr
Tony Pena 15 42 1 7 10 0 0 1 3 4 8 0 0 0 .167
But at least he's in there which is more than you can say for Sandy "Ouch
I can't play" Alomar Jr.
George
|
88.1863 | | SALEM::DODA | Improvise, adapt, overcome | Fri May 19 1995 17:58 | 5 |
| You got that right. Being on the same team with Alomar basically
guarantees you 60-70 games a season regardless of your
performance.
daryll
|
88.1864 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Fri May 19 1995 23:28 | 4 |
88.1865 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Sat May 20 1995 09:05 | 4 |
|
YOU IDIOTS ASKED IF HE HAD THROWN ANYONE OUT?
I just told ya!!
|
88.1866 | has Ryan reported to Treton yet??? | AD::HEATH | Red Sox suck Tribe rooooools | Mon May 22 1995 08:03 | 7 |
|
Gawd......3 losses in a row after having late inning leads. The 'pen
was horrible this weekend. Ryan sucks, Lilliquist is a joke, Belinda
is Belinda on and on. 3 blown late inning leads gawd....
Jerry
|
88.1867 | | PTOSS1::JACOBR | Playing with box the kids came in! | Mon May 22 1995 15:20 | 11 |
| >> Belinda
>>is Belinda on and on. 3 blown late inning leads gawd....
We in Pittsburgh know exactly everything there is to know about
Belinda.
Glad he's up there and not still here.
Jake
|
88.1868 | | SALEM::DODA | Improvise, adapt, overcome | Mon May 22 1995 16:43 | 4 |
| Well there ain't many save opportunities in Pitt. these days
anyway is there?
daryll
|
88.1869 | | PTOSS1::JACOBR | It happened 13 years ago today | Mon May 22 1995 17:00 | 5 |
| Well, lessee, after Friday night's game, the Bucs bullpen was 7 fer 7
in save opportunities.
JaKe
|
88.1870 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Mon May 22 1995 17:16 | 8 |
|
Belinda hasn't been blowing the saves for the Red Sox. Good
old Ken Ryan and others have been. Belinda pitched 2 2/3 innings
Friday night then Ryan blew the save. I also believe Ryan blew the
save on Belinda yesterday. Belinda did give up 2 runs yesterday, so
i could be wrong on Sunday's game.
Ron
|
88.1871 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue May 23 1995 11:16 | 7 |
| The Bullpen had 3 bad days and everyone panics.
It's only 3 games against one team. Tomorrow's another day.
Ryan and the pen have done ok before and he'll do ok again.
George
|
88.1872 | | SALEM::DODA | Improvise, adapt, overcome | Tue May 23 1995 12:17 | 5 |
| Yeah, and the Bucs have what 9 wins this year? With the win
column totalling 9, save opportunities would be limited wouldn't
they?
daryll
|
88.1873 | | MKOTS3::LONG | Life is better left to chance. | Tue May 23 1995 12:21 | 5 |
| True, Daryll, (or was it your other brother Daryll?) there ain't been
many, but 7 fer 7 ain't too shabby.
billl
|
88.1874 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue May 23 1995 14:39 | 5 |
| >He's pathetic behind the plate, period.
Leyritz' value is not as a catcher. At one point last season he was
the 3rd catcher behind Stanley and Nokes. Not one Yankee fan cares
about Leyritz' arm....only his bat.
|
88.1875 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Tue May 23 1995 14:51 | 6 |
|
Thanks Joe!
Chap
|
88.1876 | | SALEM::DODA | Improvise, adapt, overcome | Tue May 23 1995 16:04 | 4 |
| He better hit a ton to make up for the extra bases that other
teams are taking at will.
daryll
|
88.1877 | Sox win in ten | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Wed May 24 1995 10:02 | 2 |
| I heard that the Sox won in 10 innings last night against Seattle,
does anyone have the box score or highlights of the game?
|
88.1878 | | MKOTS3::LONG | Life is better left to chance. | Wed May 24 1995 10:13 | 4 |
| If the Sox did indeed win, I'm sure Chappy has all the details. ;^)
billl
|
88.1879 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Wed May 24 1995 10:40 | 3 |
|
Belindagot the win Ryan got the save!
|
88.1880 | Ryan sucks | AD::HEATH | Red Sox suck Tribe rooooools | Wed May 24 1995 13:02 | 3 |
|
Heard Ryan's save was of the Reardon variety.
|
88.1881 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | JJS the BucketsMaster | Wed May 24 1995 13:43 | 3 |
| What's the scoop om my man Rocket? Is he back this weekend?
mike
|
88.1882 | He's on the comeback trail | CNTROL::SALMON | | Wed May 24 1995 14:05 | 6 |
| Mikey:
He pitched 4 innings of no hit ball against some "A" Carolina
league last night.
JS
|
88.1883 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Wed May 24 1995 14:26 | 4 |
|
I hear he's pulling a "Rodman" the team wants him in the bullpen
but he says he will start??
|
88.1884 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 24 1995 14:33 | 18 |
| Someone in the press came up with the idea, based only on those 3 games
against the Indians and nothing more, that the Rocket should pitch relief. They
then decided that the idea belonged to the team and now it appears that they've
decided that Clemens has rejected the idea showing once again the obvious bad
sportsmanship of one who by the way does not give a lot of interviews.
Both Clemens and the Red Sox insist that neither side ever considered putting
him into the bull pen but of course what do they know, the Boston press has
spoken.
Meanwhile back in reality, the rumor that seems to have survived for the last
few days is that Clemens will pitch against the Mariners on June 2 which would
represent their 1st game back home after the west cost road trip.
And in my back pocket are two tickets to that game which are NOT, repeat NOT
for sale.
George
|
88.1885 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | JJS the BucketsMaster | Wed May 24 1995 14:53 | 4 |
|
Clemens will feign injury instead of facing the mighty Griffey.......
mike
|
88.1886 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 24 1995 15:03 | 11 |
| Speaking of Griffey, is it just a case of me seeing a bad sample of his at
bats or does he often get himself behind in the count.
Seems I'm always seeing him take the 1st pitch for a strike then foul the
next one off going in a hole 0-2.
He doesn't walk much but then again he doesn't strike out much either. Last
year he had 56 walks and 73 K's in 433 at bats. In fact, at 40 home runs he
had 4 homers for every 5 walks.
George
|
88.1887 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Wed May 24 1995 15:21 | 8 |
|
Yup,
Ryan got the save. The last out was a deep fly ball to CF by Jay
Buhner. Ron Mahay caught the ball with his back touching the wall on
the warning track. About 2 feet more and it was gopher ball.
Ron
|
88.1888 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 24 1995 15:56 | 23 |
| Well yeah, this is about right. Last year Ken Ryan posted an ERA of 2.44 and
went 2-3 with 13 saves in 42 appearances. He struck out 32 in 48 innings while
only walking 17 but ...
... wait a minute! He's had 2 or 3 bad games! He had a bad game against the
best hitting team in baseball and one of the best right fielders in baseball
took him deep in a hitters park for an out so ...
--- STOP THE PRESSES, WE'VE GOT A STORY!!!
--- Ken Ryan is a FAILURE!!!
--- PUT ROGER CLEMENS IN THE BULL PEN!
--- WHAT, HE WON'T GO!!! HE'S NOT A TEAM PLAYER!!! BESIDES, HE DOESN'T GIVE
GOOD INTERVIEW.
--- BUT WHAT EVER YOU DO
!!!! **** PANIC **** !!!!
... it makes good copy,
George
|
88.1889 | This is from a baseball fan not a Yankee fan!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Wed May 24 1995 16:13 | 6 |
|
George you haven't been watching the Red Sox enough if you think
Ryan is just going through a thing!! He has always been hit hard and
he is not a real closer.
|
88.1890 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 24 1995 16:47 | 5 |
| Well maybe and maybe not but it's a bit premature to say he stinks. He's
only had the job for a year or so and the Sox are in building mode. Why not
give him a bit more time to see if he can grow into the job?
George
|
88.1891 | he's a set up man at heart | AD::HEATH | Red Sox suck Tribe rooooools | Wed May 24 1995 16:48 | 3 |
|
Ryan sucks. Has the stuff not the guts
|
88.1892 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 24 1995 17:36 | 23 |
| Here's Ken Ryan from last year along with the guys who got more saves than
he did all sorted by innings pitched. Considering that he's the kid just
starting out as closer, his numbers don't look that bad.
Name ERA SV IP H BB SO Ratio R ER HR G GF
Jeff Brantley CIN 2.488 15 65.1 46 28 63 1.14 20 18 6 50 35
John Wetteland NYY 2.848 25 63.2 46 21 68 1.06 22 20 5 52 43
Bobby Ayala SEA 2.883 18 56.2 42 26 76 1.21 25 18 2 46 40
Doug Jones BAL 2.167 27 54.0 55 6 38 1.13 14 13 2 47 42
John Franco NYM 2.700 30 50.0 47 19 42 1.32 20 15 2 47 43
Rod Beck SFG 2.801 28 48.2 49 13 39 1.29 17 15 10 48 47
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
**Ken Ryan** BOS 2.438 13 48.0 46 17 32 1.31 14 13 1 42 26
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rick Aguilera MIN 3.665 23 44.2 57 10 46 1.52 23 18 7 44 40
Jeff Montgomery KCR 4.072 27 44.2 48 15 50 1.43 21 20 5 42 38
Dennis Eckersley OAK 4.286 19 44.1 49 13 47 1.41 26 21 5 45 39
Jeff Russell CLE 5.149 17 40.2 43 16 28 1.47 25 23 5 42 36
Randy Myers CHC 3.815 21 40.1 40 16 32 1.40 18 17 3 38 34
Steve Howe NYY 1.800 15 40.0 28 7 18 0.88 8 8 2 40 25
Lee Smith BAL 3.307 33 38.1 34 11 42 1.18 16 14 6 41 39
George
|
88.1893 | Ryan runs hot and cold I'll say that.... | AD::HEATH | Red Sox suck Tribe rooooools | Thu May 25 1995 08:16 | 7 |
|
I'll say it again Ryan sucks. George numbers only will tell � the
story. Some of those "saves" came with him comming in the 9th with
a 3 run lead and the sox winning by one. To me that is VERY poor.
Jerry
|
88.1894 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu May 25 1995 10:10 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1893 by AD::HEATH "Red Sox suck Tribe rooooools" >>>
> Some of those "saves" came with him coming in the 9th with
> a 3 run lead and the sox winning by one. To me that is VERY poor.
That could probably be said for the other guys on that list as well.
Look at the rest of the numbers, he gives up about the same number of hits
and walks as the others.
George
|
88.1895 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Thu May 25 1995 11:40 | 5 |
88.1896 | Ryan sucks | AD::HEATH | Red Sox suck Tribe rooooools | Thu May 25 1995 12:31 | 5 |
|
Paul..
That would be a bad stat, one of which George don't have.
|
88.1897 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu May 25 1995 12:36 | 12 |
| It's true I don't have that stat but that's not because it's good or bad.
The stats I have are the ones sent out for Rotisserie, not the ones that
vary depending on Ryan's abilities.
So as I understand it, your argument now is that you guys win and Ryan
sucks because you speculate that if we had his IR numbers, which we don't,
they would compare unfavorably to other top stoppers.
That about right?
George
|
88.1898 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu May 25 1995 14:01 | 13 |
|
FWIW...
Give or take an appearance (i.e., not quite through the strike),
Ryan's numbers last year:
11 runners inherited
0 runners scored
Joe
P.S. I'm not convinced Ryan can be a closer, but he certainly hasn't
shown me to this point that he can't.
|
88.1899 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Thu May 25 1995 14:31 | 9 |
|
Instead of making Roger the closer. Looks like they are going
to make Frankie Rodriquez the closer. Paper says that he won't start
anymore in the minors. He will be a relief pitcher, with the intent
on conditioning his arm for very frequent use. Frankie still has the
mentality of playing everyday. When not pitching he wants to play
shortstop. So if he wants to play everyday, let him pitch every day.
Ron
|
88.1900 | No to Heiser | PTOSS1::JACOBR | Certified Looney | Thu May 25 1995 16:17 | 7 |
| They could always call up Tim Wakefield from the minors to be their
closer.
(8^)*
JaKe
|
88.1901 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Thu May 25 1995 16:29 | 4 |
|
Especially with his control!! :-)
|
88.1902 | Alex Rodriquez has improved 100% over last year | AD::HEATH | Red Sox suck Tribe rooooools | Fri May 26 1995 08:12 | 8 |
|
Hey last I looked Wakefield was 2-0 in three games with an ERA of
.091. He only walked 1 or so in his last outing. Problem is the
defensive side of the #2 position in Boston is NOT it's stong point.
Crappy game yesterday by the way.
Jerry
|
88.1903 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri May 26 1995 10:28 | 9 |
| According to today's Globe the Sox did call up Wakefield and he will be
starting against the Angels. Although he was 2-0 with a low ERA he got shelled
in his 3rd game at Pawtucket and gave up a bunch of runs.
The story went on to talk about how Mike Macfarlane didn't have a large
glove to catch knuckle ball pitchers but no problem, Wakefield brought along
a couple of his own and gave them to Macfarlane.
George
|
88.1904 | \ | MKOTS3::LONG | Life is better left to chance. | Fri May 26 1995 10:37 | 6 |
| Are you telling me Wakefield got traded from the Bucs to the Sox?
I thought he really had a future.
billl
|
88.1905 | | SALEM::DODA | Chairman of the Bored | Fri May 26 1995 10:55 | 1 |
| They released him.
|
88.1906 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri May 26 1995 11:04 | 11 |
| According to our Rotisserie Transactions Wakefield was signed by the BoSox to
a minor league contract around April 28th. There hasn't been a transaction
listed yet for him coming up but he seems to have joined the team so most
likely the transaction will be listed tomorrow.
Also according to the Globe there will be a delay on Jose Canseco returning
from the DL. He was taking batting practice and after a swing he left the
batting cage holding on to his left side. He seems to have aggravated an injury
near his ribs.
George
|
88.1907 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri May 26 1995 11:10 | 16 |
|
No, Wakefield was released by Pittsburgh, and picked up by Boston.
And, while he might have a future, the Pirates have lots of pitchers
I'd rather take a chance on than Wakefield, who's success in '92
looks way out of line when compared with the rest of his career.
Specifically, I'd rather take a chance on any of the following:
Jason Christiansen, Steve Cooke, John Ericks, John Hope, Jon Lieber,
Esteban Loaiza, Danny Miecli, Denny Neagle, Brian SHouse, Paul
Wagner, Rick White, and Gary Wilson.
Given that, Wakefield _is_ someone I'd be happy to have in the minors
so long as he wasn't in the way of my other prospects.
Joe
|
88.1908 | Blowpen needs help... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 26 1995 11:49 | 16 |
|
I really wish that 4-year free agency plan had stuck and the Sox had
held onto John Wetteland. That would have been a key pickup; the most
important that they could have made. I see where some Yank fans have
been giving me the business around badmouthing Wetteland but it just
ain't so; the guy is just about the best there is. On the other hand,
Ken Ryan is just too wild and at this stage of his career just doesn't
quite seem to be ready for the transition from setup to fulltime
closer. Amazing what happens when the time comes to step out of the
shadow of the immortal Jeff Russell.
Tim Wakefield's knuckleball developed some kind of mental problem
some time ago, preliminary diagnosis of Steve Blass Disease...
glenn
|
88.1909 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri May 26 1995 12:00 | 8 |
|
> I really wish that 4-year free agency plan had stuck and the Sox had
> held onto John Wetteland.
That's funny - I really wish the 4-year FA plan had stuck and the
Tribe had held onto Kent Mercker...
Joe
|
88.1910 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Fri May 26 1995 12:33 | 4 |
88.1911 | | DZIGN::ROBICHAUD | Funny Bone | Fri May 26 1995 13:13 | 4 |
| The Slobs will regret trading away Corey Bailey in the Jose "Mayo
Clinic" Canseco deal...
/Don
|
88.1912 | many :*) | AD::HEATH | Red Sox suck Tribe rooooools | Fri May 26 1995 13:13 | 5 |
|
Why Paul you skeert.
Jerry
|
88.1913 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Fri May 26 1995 14:33 | 4 |
| The Slobs will regret trading away Corey Bailey in the Jose "Mayo
Clinic" Canseco deal...
Bailey went to the Cardinals in the Whiten deal.
|
88.1914 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Fri May 26 1995 16:37 | 20 |
88.1915 | News on Whiten | SUBPAC::SKALSKI | | Fri May 26 1995 16:43 | 12 |
|
Heard on sports talk on the way in today thjat Whiten
was flying to Boston to have some sort of test done on his
hamstring injury. I'm no physician but since when does a
hamstring require a battery of tests. Could be bad news
that the brass are keeping low profile on, anyone hear this
or more?
Shark
|
88.1916 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri May 26 1995 16:44 | 17 |
| I think the problem is that most people don't realize that the BoSox are
building for the future. The guys they've got now had a great month, charged
into 1st place and now everyone's all worked up because they can't seem to play
like a contender.
Dan Duquette likes to build the organization from the minor leagues up and
that should take some time. Last year the Expos were rated by Baseball Weekly
to have the best minor league system in the National League. If he can do that
for the BoSox then by the end of the decade the team should start to look
pretty good.
Meanwhile they've got some big names drawing some big salaries to fill Fenway
Park and when they've got the bats cranking they can win some ballgames. As
long as you don't have your expectations out of line, being a BoSox fan can
be fun.
George
|
88.1917 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri May 26 1995 16:48 | 15 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1915 by SUBPAC::SKALSKI >>>
> Heard on sports talk on the way in today thjat Whiten
> was flying to Boston to have some sort of test done on his
> hamstring injury. I'm no physician but since when does a
> hamstring require a battery of tests. Could be bad news
> that the brass are keeping low profile on, anyone hear this
> or more?
The Globe had that story. I wouldn't worry about it too much, they probably
realize he won't play the next 6 games so why keep him out on the west cost?
Also they may be planning to put him on the DL to make room for Wakefield
so again, why keep him around?
George
|
88.1918 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 31 1995 10:28 | 16 |
| Anyone catch the game last night? Tim Wakefield pitched a gem only giving up
1 or two hits and one walk to the A's in 7 plus innings. The Bullpen came in
and closed it out combining with Wakefield for a 3 hitter.
And they needed ever bit of that pitching effort as the Sox hitters were only
able to come up with 1 run against old World Series nemesis Ron Darling who
pitched a complete game for the A's.
Wakefield's butterflies had the A's hitters totally baffled. Not only were
they restricted to a couple hits and a walk, they only hit 3 pop flies out of
the infield. Ken "sucks" Ryan had the save blowing fastballs past A's hitters
almost at will. Only Ricky Henderson seemed to be able to stand in against Ryan
and he finally flew to center for the final out.
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.1919 | Ryan is to inconsistant George why can't you accept that | AD::HEATH | Bill Buckner my hero | Wed May 31 1995 13:08 | 8 |
|
And if Ken Ryan holds true to form he'll serve up a single,couple of walks
and a line drive out to the wall for his next save and follow that up
with a 6 run ninth.
Jerry
|
88.1920 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Wed May 31 1995 13:17 | 3 |
|
DAMN I missed note .1918!!!! :-(
|
88.1921 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 31 1995 14:09 | 17 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1919 by AD::HEATH "Bill Buckner my hero" >>>
> -< Ryan is to inconsistant George why can't you accept that >-
BOS Red Sox Pitchers W L G GS CG GF SH SV IP H R ER HR BB SO
Ken Ryan 2 3 42 0 0 26 0 13 48.0 46 14 13 1 17 32
I don't accept it because the numbers don't back it up, look at his numbers
from last year. In 42 appearances he only blew 3 games against 26 finishes
including 13 saves.
Add in the fact that the Sox are building for the future so he's not expected
to be all that great just yet. Things like consistency come with experience.
He's doing fine and over the next few years he should get better.
George
|
88.1922 | Is the 1992 Tim Wakefield really back? | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 31 1995 15:14 | 11 |
|
Wakefield had just pitched 7 innings Saturday night, right? That
means he was going on just two days rest in a day and age where
going on even three is considered superhuman. I say keep trotting
him out there every third day, twice on Sundays and holidays a la
Wilbur Wood, while he's still in the groove. There's something to
be said for the knuckleballer with a tired arm. Keeps them from
thinking too much...
glenn
|
88.1923 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 31 1995 15:28 | 12 |
| That's right, he pitched on 2 days rest, but as of the 7th he had only
thrown about 100 pitches. He had faced just two more than the minimum before
he gave up a hit and Kennedy pulled him out.
It was something watching those A's hitters try to hit the thing, not unlike
someone in their living room swatting at a fly with a rolled up newspaper. And
Macfarlane looked like he was doing some sort of modern jazz dance behind the
plate. And the players were not the only ones effected. By the end of the game,
the umpire had no idea where the strike zone began and ended.
It was something to watch,
George
|
88.1924 | RE: .1921 | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Wed May 31 1995 15:47 | 18 |
|
George, one thing that you've failed to note is that Ryan wasn't the
closer a good part of last year. A substantial portion of the numbers
you showed were compiled by Ryan as a set-up man.
There's a significant difference between the two - the closer comes into
what is generally a higher-pressure situation, with the opposing team
geared up to hit against him because it's do-or-die for them. There are
a lot of set-up guys out there who put up sparkling numbers - very few of
them stick when tried as closers. That's why a good closer is considered
one of the most precious commodities in baseball.
I don't believe Ryan is a bum, but I do believe he's miscast as a closer.
He's been pretty inconsistent in that role this year.
Do you have Ryan's numbers for this year to date?
Roland
|
88.1925 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 31 1995 16:33 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1924 by IMBETR::DUPREZ >>>
>Do you have Ryan's numbers for this year to date?
Yes but the sample size is pretty small so I don't think it says a lot.
BOS Red Sox Pitchers W L G GS CG GF SH SV IP H ER HR BB SO ERA
Ken Ryan 0 1 12 0 0 9 0 3 15.0 13 8 3 10 17 4.80
As you can see in 12 games he's finished 9 including 3 saves while only
losing 1.
His earned runs are up but it remains to be seen whether that is going to
be typical or is just an example of 1 or 2 bad games.
George
|
88.1926 | RE: .1925 | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Wed May 31 1995 17:09 | 25 |
|
A good comparison would be to take the numbers for other
closers such as Jose Mesa, Jeff Montgomery, Rick Aguilera,
etc., and put them next to Ryan. For a bona fide closer,
3 saves for 9 games finished is pretty weak. Obviously,
the save->games finished percentage is influenced by how
the closer is used by the manager, but usual usage is to
only trot him out when you've got a lead, or sometimes in
a tie. He *should* finish most of the games, one way or
the other.
Other things I see off of the admittedly limited sample
are:
o way too many baserunners allowed
o high earned run average
o too many longballs given up
If Kevin Kennedy says he's happy with Ryan, my guess is
that it's only to avoid hampering Duquette's bargaining
ability if it comes time to go after a closer.
Roland
|
88.1927 | | PUSH::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed May 31 1995 17:41 | 10 |
|
> A good comparison would be to take the numbers for other
> closers such as Jose Mesa, Jeff Montgomery, Rick Aguilera,
> etc., and put them next to Ryan.
Oh my. Mesa's name being trotted out as a "real closer".
Isn't this one of the signs of Armageddon?
Joe
|
88.1928 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed May 31 1995 17:48 | 15 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1926 by IMBETR::DUPREZ >>>
>A good comparison would be to take the numbers for other
>closers such as Jose Mesa, Jeff Montgomery, Rick Aguilera,
>etc., and put them next to Ryan. For a bona fide closer,
>3 saves for 9 games finished is pretty weak.
I disagree. Except for Montgomery What you are doing is comparing Ryan to
closers who are having all-star years and saying that because he does not have
all-star numbers, he's not a bona fide closer.
Give me an example of a couple or three closer that you would consider bona
fide but not an all-star and let's compare him to their numbers?
George
|
88.1929 | | SALEM::DODA | Chairman of the Bored | Wed May 31 1995 18:14 | 4 |
| Well, you could put him up against Doug Jones' numbers this year
and it'd make him look great.
daryll
|
88.1930 | Wasn't worried a bit | AD::HEATH | Bill Buckner my hero | Thu Jun 01 1995 08:10 | 7 |
|
Well George I'll have to give it to yea, I was wrong about Ryan.
What 9th inning yesterday. 1 IP 0 R ER. Yup thats exactly what
a closer is suppose to do. Shut 'em right down he did.
Jerry
|
88.1931 | SOX GET STRAIGHT A's | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Thu Jun 01 1995 08:52 | 7 |
| Red Sox 6
Athletics 5
The last time the Red Sox swept the A's was back in 1986, which
was the last time Boston won the American League pennant.
|
88.1932 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Thu Jun 01 1995 10:48 | 33 |
| > I disagree. Except for Montgomery What you are doing is comparing Ryan to
>closers who are having all-star years and saying that because he does not have
>all-star numbers, he's not a bona fide closer.
> Give me an example of a couple or three closer that you would consider bona
>fide but not an all-star and let's compare him to their numbers?
I think saying Aguilera is having an all-star year is somewhat of a stretch.
OK, here's as many as I can think of - should be a decent cross-section. If
some are missing it's because I'm not sure who the team's closer is, or because
they divide the role up:
BOS: Ken Ryan
DET: Mike Henneman
NYY: John Wetteland
CHI: Roberto Hernandez
CLE: Jose Mesa
KCR: Jeff Montgomery
MIN: Rick Aguilera
MIL: Mike Fetters
SEA: Bobby Ayala
TEX: Jeff Russell (why can't the Red Sox get guys like this :-)
OAK: Dennis Eckersley
That's 11 out of 14 teams. BAL has Jones/Benitez, CAL has Grahe/Smith/???.
Is Darren Hall still the closer in Toronto while Ward heals?
Anyway, that's as complete as I can get. Fair enough?
Roland
|
88.1933 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 01 1995 11:13 | 36 |
|
Aguilera's done pretty well when he's been in there. He's got 7 saves and
has yet to give up a run. Mesa's also having an all-star year. Take a look,
a win and 8 saves in 13 games, almost a strike out per inning, looks like
all-star numbers to me.
Let's see, figure 5 closers from your list for the all-star game and that
might be:
All-Star Pitchers W L G GS CG GF SH SV IP H R ER HR BB SO ERA
Rick Aguilera 0 0 10 0 0 9 0 7 11.0 4 0 0 0 2 15 0.000
Mike Henneman 0 0 10 0 0 9 0 4 10.2 8 0 1 0 3 7 0.882
Jeff Russell 1 0 10 0 0 9 0 6 10.0 11 0 3 1 1 5 2.700
Jose Mesa 1 0 13 0 0 12 0 8 15.1 15 0 5 1 5 13 2.980
Dennis Eckersley 0 2 12 0 0 12 0 7 11.2 12 0 4 0 1 7 3.214
Russell get's an edge because he's from Texas and they are probably still
smarting from Ceido Gaston's: Duane Ward / Mike Mussina incident. And the Eck
should go because he's the Eck.
That leaves the following guys from your list. Keep in mind that since the
freeze stats Ryan has picked up a couple saves and pitched a couple scoreless
innings. That aught to move min right into the middle of this pack.
Mike Fetters 0 0 8 0 0 7 0 3 7.1 6 0 1 0 2 8 1.268
Bobby Ayala 0 0 14 0 0 10 0 7 16.0 12 0 4 1 5 13 2.250
Roberto Hernandez 0 2 13 0 0 13 0 8 14.0 11 0 5 3 4 23 3.214
Jeff Montgomery 0 0 11 0 0 9 0 5 13.0 11 0 6 1 4 8 4.154
Ken Ryan 0 1 12 0 0 9 0 3 15.0 13 0 8 3 10 17 4.800
John Wetteland 1 1 11 0 0 10 0 6 13.0 13 0 7 3 4 11 4.846
I agree he's not an all-star closer, I never said he was but I wouldn't
say he sucks. A better description would be that he's an average closer and
being young will probably improve.
George
|
88.1934 | if Larussa had a clue he blows one yesterday | AD::HEATH | Bill Buckner my hero | Thu Jun 01 1995 11:19 | 9 |
|
George take a good look at his baserunners per inning. 15 innings
pitched 13 hits 10 BB. Thats 23 baserunners in 15 innings probably
more if errors and HP where counted in. Thats 1.5+ baserunners per
inning. With a closer like that we can do without. Ryan sucks.
Jerry
|
88.1935 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 01 1995 11:26 | 9 |
| But remember, this is a very small sample size and a lot of that came from
one or two bad games.
I remember reading once that there was a day back in 1965 when the Dodgers
lost both halves of a double header. The two losing pitchers were Koufax and
Drysdale. Based on that would you say that they had weak starting pitchers?
I guess that day they did.
George
|
88.1936 | I think you proved my point more than yours... | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Thu Jun 01 1995 11:31 | 17 |
|
George, I don't understand your reasoning. You took the names I gave you
and split them into two groups - All-Stars and non-All-Stars. Ryan shows
up second to the bottom in the *lesser* list, and you claim that he's around
the middle of the pack?
Keep in mind that the 4 other closers aren't necessarily worse than Ryan.
I for one would take Armando Benitez over him (even not having a *clue* about
his numbers, and I would still take Lee Arthur Smith (if he's indeed closing).
Who is an All-Star and who is not is not the point. The point is whether or
not Ryan is doing the job in comparison to the group of AL closers at large.
With a sampling of 70+% of the names, he sits very low. The Red Sox could
absolutely gain by replacing him as closer and moving him to set-up man.
(A role, by the way, in which he shines.)
Roland
|
88.1937 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 01 1995 11:44 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1936 by IMBETR::DUPREZ >>>
>George, I don't understand your reasoning. You took the names I gave you
>and split them into two groups - All-Stars and non-All-Stars. Ryan shows
>up second to the bottom in the *lesser* list, and you claim that he's around
>the middle of the pack?
No, keep in mind what people are saying. I never claimed Ryan was an all-star
closer, all I'm saying is that he doesn't suck. You listed what I feel are
two groups of closer, all-star closers and every day or average closers. You
omitted the closers that suck.
>Who is an All-Star and who is not is not the point. The point is whether or
>not Ryan is doing the job in comparison to the group of AL closers at large.
>With a sampling of 70+% of the names, he sits very low.
But the problem is, you didn't compare him to 70% of the guys who have
come into a game in a save situation, only to those who are good enough and/or
lucky enough to be currently holding down a closer job. The guys who suck
already lost their closer jobs and were not on your list.
George
|
88.1938 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Thu Jun 01 1995 11:55 | 8 |
|
BTW
Lee Smith is leading the league in Saves!!
He has 12 MESA 10 HERNANDEZ and AGUILERA 8
|
88.1939 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Thu Jun 01 1995 12:00 | 5 |
88.1940 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Thu Jun 01 1995 12:12 | 16 |
|
So Mesa has 11 saves. Isn't the Tribe his 4th team in like 5 years.
The Tribe picked up someone else's dead weight and he is doing pretty good.
ESPN had a cover story on closers last night. I didn't write down any
of the stats. It did show how pitiful a closer Mesa was the last three
seasons. It takes maturity and the right mental frame of mind to be a
closer. They showed other closers who were bad there first 2 or 3 years
being closers also.
Lets not forget that ALL closers make mistakes. Hey, even the great
Dennis Eckersly in his prime. Gave up that game winning home run in the
World Series to Kirk Gibson. There have been other home runs in WS and
playoffs. Against top of the line closers also.
Having a great closer like John Wetteland doesn't mean anything
either. If your losing in the 9th. :^) and he doesn't pitch.
Ron
|
88.1941 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Jun 01 1995 12:37 | 9 |
| > Having a great closer like John Wetteland doesn't mean anything
> either. If your losing in the 9th. :^) and he doesn't pitch.
Wetteland has been a disappointment so far. The ERA is way too high...so
are the hits/IP. When you hear his name and Gossage in the same sentence
you expect a lot more.
Of course, I've never thought Showalter knows what he's doing with his
bullpen, so it may not be John's fault.
|
88.1942 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Jun 01 1995 12:37 | 3 |
| > Lee Smith is leading the league in Saves!!
how many will he have after the A-S Break ?
|
88.1943 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Thu Jun 01 1995 13:09 | 7 |
|
I don't know but he sure would be nice to have around for April and
MAY.
Chap
|
88.1944 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Thu Jun 01 1995 13:49 | 10 |
88.1945 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Jun 01 1995 14:21 | 10 |
|
Also, to answer the other question...
Mesa has not failed as a closer before - he's never had the chance.
He was a rather awful _starter_, but that doesn't necessarily
prevent what he's doing now from being real, particularly coming
on the heals of a very successful season in the bullpen last year.
Joe
|
88.1946 | Nice note # | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Thu Jun 01 1995 14:24 | 3 |
|
1946 St Louis 4 Red Sox 3
|
88.1947 | RE: .1937 | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Thu Jun 01 1995 15:23 | 33 |
|
> But the problem is, you didn't compare him to 70% of the guys who have
>come into a game in a save situation, only to those who are good enough and/or
>lucky enough to be currently holding down a closer job. The guys who suck
>already lost their closer jobs and were not on your list.
<sigh>
Yes, that's the whole point. In order for a team to do well, they need one
"go-to" guy to close out a game. (There are exceptions, but not that many
among successful teams.) That's who he *has* to be compared to - it is the
role that he fills.
I didn't compare him to 70% of the guys who come into a game in a save
situation because that applies to *tons* of pitchers (I don't want to get
into the save qualifications here - too involved). We're talking about
closers - the guys who are specifically selected by their manager to be
the guy to *finish* the game when the team has a lead.
If you're talking about *all* relief pitchers, then yes, I'll admit Ryan is
middle of the pack. But as a closer he's terrible.
And no, I did *not* omit the "closers that suck". I gave you my best guesses
at who the missing closers were. After some of the subsequent notes it appears
they are Lee Smith, Darren Hall, and either Doug Jones or Armando Benitez (take
your pick). That would give you *all* 14 of the AL closers. If you had the
stats for all 14, I think you'd find that Ryan was about 12th, and certainly
no better than 10th.
I don't have the numbers handy, and I don't expect you to produce them unless
you're interested, but I would like to see them if you do find them.
Roland
|
88.1948 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 01 1995 16:01 | 32 |
| <<< Note 88.1947 by IMBETR::DUPREZ >>>
>I didn't compare him to 70% of the guys who come into a game in a save
>situation because that applies to *tons* of pitchers (I don't want to get
>into the save qualifications here - too involved).
A "save situation" is one in which the home team is leading by 3 or less
runs. A pitcher gets a save if he holds on to the lead and finishes the game.
It's not at all involved.
>We're talking about
>closers - the guys who are specifically selected by their manager to be
>the guy to *finish* the game when the team has a lead.
>
>If you're talking about *all* relief pitchers, then yes, I'll admit Ryan is
>middle of the pack. But as a closer he's terrible.
No that's not what the numbers suggest. Only by leaving out the guys who
come into a game in close situations and lose more than they save can you
come up with a list in which Ryan is near the bottom. The way it works there
three groups:
1). All-star closers: Great numbers, almost always get the save.
2). Regular closers: Good numbers often get the save. (including Ken Ryan)
3). Terrible closers: More often than not blow the save and don't remain
closers for very long.
Only by omitting group three can you show Ken Ryan in the bottom group.
George
|
88.1949 | I give up lets end this now | AD::HEATH | Bill Buckner my hero | Thu Jun 01 1995 16:03 | 8 |
|
Roland...
George is right Ryan is god. Didn't you see/read about that bang up
job he did yesterday.
Jerry
|
88.1950 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 01 1995 16:06 | 15 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1949 by AD::HEATH "Bill Buckner my hero" >>>
> George is right Ryan is god. Didn't you see/read about that bang up
> job he did yesterday.
You're not going to end this conversation by suggesting that I'm making
claims that I am not making. Your "Ryan is god" phrase suggests that I'm
saying Ryan is an all-star stopper. I'm not. But he's not at the other end
either which consists of the guys who get a chance as stopper but blow more
than they save and end up losing that job.
Saying Ryan sucks is just as wrong as saying he's an all-star closer. He
is neither. He's an average stopper who generally gets more saves than losses.
George
|
88.1951 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Thu Jun 01 1995 16:08 | 3 |
|
Ryan Sucks
|
88.1952 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 01 1995 16:14 | 3 |
| The Yankees suck, Ryan is a decent closer.
George
|
88.1953 | Ryan = Bob Stanley | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Thu Jun 01 1995 16:28 | 7 |
|
Buy your Playoff tickets for Fenway today George because they won't
be selling them in September!!
Chap
|
88.1954 | RE: .1950 | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Thu Jun 01 1995 16:29 | 38 |
|
AAAAARRRRGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!
You're making me tear out what little hair I have left... :-)
>He's an average stopper who generally gets more saves than losses.
The object of a closer is not simply to save more games than he loses.
If he breaks even in this department he is failing miserably, and his
team is suffering in the win/loss column. At a guess (and I'd welcome
any input from other baseball fans), he should be expected to obtain a
save in about 75-80% of his appearances, and finish the game in about 90% of
them. (Comments, Glenn Waugaman?) Once he's given up the lead, whether
or not he gets the loss is meaningless.
You obviously don't get the fact that guys who are no longer the closer
are immaterial to this argument. What is important is how Ryan is doing
in relation to the other guys who are doing the same job - there are 14
of them. For you to say he's average, he'd have to be in about the 6-9
range. And he's not - from the numbers you presented before, even if the
3 unlisted guys are worse than him (they're not), he's maybe 10th best.
If the Red Sox are going to have any chance, they need to do better than
that.
I'm not trying to argue that Ryan is useless, because he's not - as I
said before, among pitchers as a whole, he's pretty decent. But he isn't
doing the job he has been chosen for, which is to preserve a late inning
lead.
I'm going to stop at this point - my head is sore from banging against a
brick wall...
Roland
P.S. It doesn't affect the argument because I know what you meant, but
"stopper" usually refers to a starting pitcher who is counted on
to "stop" his team's losing streak. It's generally another term
for a team's #1 starter.
|
88.1955 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 01 1995 16:49 | 30 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1954 by IMBETR::DUPREZ >>>
>The object of a closer is not simply to save more games than he loses.
>If he breaks even in this department he is failing miserably, and his
>team is suffering in the win/loss column. At a guess (and I'd welcome
>any input from other baseball fans), he should be expected to obtain a
>save in about 75-80% of his appearances, and finish the game in about 90% of
>them.
So great, at 5 saves against 1 loss he's met your standard.
>You obviously don't get the fact that guys who are no longer the closer
>are immaterial to this argument.
Get the fact? You mean I don't agree with your opinion. Those guys most
certainly are important to this discussion, those are the closers that suck.
>What is important is how Ryan is doing
>in relation to the other guys who are doing the same job - there are 14
>of them. For you to say he's average, he'd have to be in about the 6-9
>range.
Here we disagree. There are a lot more than 14 over the course of the season.
It is my opinion that the top 5 are the all-star closers, the next 5 or 6 are
the regular closers, and after that come a host of closers that "suck" and
lose their job. They may end up being decent set up men but they fail as
closers. I see Ryan in the middle group and at his age he has a real decent
chance of improving.
George
|
88.1956 | | LJSRV2::KNIPSTEIN | | Thu Jun 01 1995 17:41 | 15 |
| I don't really intend to get embroiled in this "discussion", but for
what it's worth here's a comparison of Ken "sucks" Ryan with John
"the Ultimate closer" Wetteland - :-)
w l era G GF S BS
Wetteland 1 1 4.85 11 10 6 2
Ryan 0 1 4.80 12 9 3 2
The only major discrepancy appears to be in saves compared to games
finished, but I don't have info on how many of Ryans games finished
were in save situations - although I would assume that you would add
the saves and blown saves to get that number.
Steve
|
88.1957 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Thu Jun 01 1995 18:49 | 12 |
|
More fuel, but I believe you will find the numbers slightly different.
Not sure about Wetteland, but I believe you will find that Ryan is now:
w l era G GF S BS
Wetteland 1 1 4.85 11 10 6 2
Ryan 0 1 4.23 14 11 5 2
This is based on his last two saves (I assume 2 full innings)
Marc
|
88.1958 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Jun 02 1995 10:47 | 10 |
|
I can't go so far as to yet say that Ken Ryan "sucks". He's sucked so
far, yes. But there's not a GM in baseball that still wouldn't like
to have him in at least the set-up role. There's not a GM in baseball
that wouldn't take him straight up without a second thought in a trade
for that Jeff Russell-in-sheeps-clothing, accident waiting to happen,
El Stiffe Grande, Jose Mesa...
glenn
|
88.1959 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Fri Jun 02 1995 10:50 | 9 |
| > There's not a GM in baseball
> that wouldn't take him straight up without a second thought in a trade
> for that Jeff Russell-in-sheeps-clothing, accident waiting to happen,
> El Stiffe Grande, Jose Mesa...
Glenn, if you're going to bait the Indians' fans, you should at least have
the decency to cross-post this in the Indians' note... :-)
Roland
|
88.1960 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Jun 02 1995 11:08 | 26 |
|
> There's not a GM in baseball
> that wouldn't take him straight up without a second thought in a trade
> for that Jeff Russell-in-sheeps-clothing, accident waiting to happen,
> El Stiffe Grande, Jose Mesa...
FWIW...
I'm no longer _expecting_ Mesa to fail. He does have a few things
going for him...
1) His K/W ratio has been OK since 1993.
2) In his first year in the bullpen (1994), he was very (albeit
surprisingly) effective.
3) He's pitching well; his performance to this point isn't just smoke
and mirrors.
Of course, he was an awful starter for a long time; a fall wouldn't
surprise me either. But it's possible that he has truly turned
around; I'm now hopeful that that is the case.
Of course, if he _does_ fail, Olson's doing _great_ in Buffalo...
Joe
|
88.1961 | Honesty | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!! | Fri Jun 02 1995 11:21 | 5 |
|
KEN RYAN SUCKS. (As a closer)
He would be a great set-up man though!
|
88.1962 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Fri Jun 02 1995 11:24 | 18 |
88.1963 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Fri Jun 02 1995 11:44 | 18 |
| > Important numbers in my opinion to look at are K/BB, SVs,
> BS, RATIO, ERA and how many inherited runners the player allowed
> to score.
Agreed. I would add a comment regarding Ratio ((H+BB)/IP) - if a closer
is going to give up baserunners, you'd rather see walks than hits. So
you'd be looking for a low H/IP.
> of
> course, Cleveland does have Gregg Olson building up to his former self
> in the minors and the Sox don't.
I'm not sure this is something I'd get geared up about - Olson has now been
"recovering" for a couple of years. As the year goes on, if either Mesa or
Ryan fail, I think you'll see their team try to get an established guy.
Aguilera is the first name that comes to mind.
Roland
|
88.1964 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Jun 02 1995 16:49 | 9 |
| > Cleveland does have Gregg Olson building up to his former self
Didn't he try this last year with Atlanta ?
re: Ryan vs. Wetteland
Awwww yer just pissed 'cause Wetteland's not in Boston....
|
88.1965 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Fri Jun 02 1995 16:52 | 8 |
88.1966 | Now to change the pname | AD::HEATH | Bill Buckner my hero | Mon Jun 05 1995 07:50 | 18 |
|
Wow great series over the weekend. Two X-tra inninng affairs. Sox
looked, dare I say it, very good. Wakefield, from the reactions I
heard on the radio didn't see Sunday's game, has become a real favorite.
I'm just glad KK didn't pull him after the E in the 10th. 2 runs in the
bottom of the 10th, this team is on a mission. What can one say about
John Valentin? If he doesn't back up Ripken at the Some-Star game it
will be a joke. He should start but we all know who the fans will vote
in. I'm not sold on Naerhing. He'll trip on the bat rack or something.
How about that save by Ryan on Saturday? Man 1 IP 0H 0R 0ER. I was
without a doubt wrong about him. His ERA is falling faster than the
Tribe will August. Who needs a closer with him around.
Jerry
ps do I have to put :*) after the last part or is sarcasm bleeding?
|
88.1967 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Mon Jun 05 1995 07:53 | 5 |
88.1968 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Mon Jun 05 1995 08:36 | 4 |
88.1969 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Mon Jun 05 1995 08:36 | 5 |
88.1970 | Keep 'em coming... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 05 1995 10:46 | 6 |
|
Groaner open mouth, insert Valentin 3 HR, 5 H, 15 TB game...
glenn
|
88.1971 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Mon Jun 05 1995 10:50 | 10 |
|
Valentin is listed as day to day with a slight concussion. He
was hit in the head with a pitch yesterday. As much as I hate to
say it, I was waiting for him to get hit. You don't hit 3 HR's in
one game and not expect a pitch to get thrown at you. Didn't see the
pitch so don't know if Belcher did it on purpose or not. I would hope
it wasn't on purpose. Purpose pitches are usually thrown at someone's
waist/ribs not the head.
Ron
|
88.1972 | Always liked Timmy, always will (good hitter, good guy) | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 05 1995 11:00 | 12 |
|
> I'm not sold on Naerhing. He'll trip on the bat rack or something.
Maybe, but there has never been any doubt about Naehring's ability to
hit, which is why I've defended him in the past. You have to give
talent some space, and patience. It's now paying off. Three short
years ago Naehring, Valentin, and Vaughn were written off by many.
Rumors were circulating around each but luckily Clueless Lou didn't
bite. Now these three are the core of the offense...
glenn
|
88.1973 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Jun 05 1995 11:01 | 8 |
| Anyone have Gammons' opinion in Valentin getting hit. Knowing his style,
he'll probably claim it was intentional.
In yesterday's Globe he went to great extent to claim that Mattingly and
Showalter don't know what they're talking about when they say that Randy
Johnson intentionally threw at Leyritz.
And when was the last time Gammons stood in the batters' box ?
|
88.1974 | Situation didn't call for it; runner too important there | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 05 1995 11:02 | 10 |
|
> I would hope
> it wasn't on purpose. Purpose pitches are usually thrown at someone's
> waist/ribs not the head.
Nobody out, 0-2 pitch in a 0-0 ballgame; that was just a pitch intended
to come inside and move Valentin off the plate, but not a beanball...
glenn
|
88.1975 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Jun 05 1995 11:38 | 5 |
| > -< Always liked Timmy, always will (good hitter, good guy) >-
Naehring is the prototypical Red Sox infielder. Drafted for his hitting
ability, not his fielding ability. They sometimes develop their defensive
skills (eg: Boggs), but that's not what gets them to Boston.
|
88.1976 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Jun 05 1995 12:27 | 29 |
| I went to the game Friday. What a game! What a night!
Clemens looked OK at 1st and everyone was pretty excited but he got a little
shaky around the middle of the game and gave up some runs. No big deal, guys
often have control problems when they 1st get back after a long break. Before
he got tired he was blowing them buy the Mariners.
Seattle outfielders made two good throws from the outfield. Darren Bragg
caught one on the warning pad in front of the wall and threw Reggie Jefferson
out at the plate when he tagged up and tried to score. Yeah it's not that far
but still the throw had to be on line and it was a strike from left field.
Griffey lives in spirit in the Mariner outfield.
Once the Mariners got their runs the crowd was a but quite until Karl Rhodes
("Tubby" "Tuffy", I forget) make his 3rd appearance at the plate and belted
his 1st hit into short right field. The crowd went wild. They stopped the
game and gave Rhodes the ball.
The end was awsome. Valintin, who had hit 2 home runs into the screen already
hit one over the screen along about the 8th and Macfarlane tied it up in the
9th with another Sox home run off Bobby Ayala. Soloman Torres came in to pitch
in the bottom of the 10th but the Sox managed to push a run around for the win.
Again the crowd went wild.
There were over 33,000 people in attendance and there still had to be about
33,000 when the Sox scored their final run. All and all a great night to go to
a ball game.
George
|
88.1977 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Mon Jun 05 1995 12:36 | 3 |
88.1978 | Nothing wrong with Naehring at 3B | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 05 1995 12:39 | 12 |
|
> Naehring is the prototypical Red Sox infielder. Drafted for his hitting
> ability, not his fielding ability. They sometimes develop their defensive
> skills (eg: Boggs), but that's not what gets them to Boston.
Naehring wasn't quite quick enough to be playing either SS or 2B where
out of necessity he was placed before, but he seems to have found his
home at 3B. He's been getting the job done there defensively, even
saving that 1-0 game with a nice play last week...
glenn
|
88.1979 | RE: .1977 | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Mon Jun 05 1995 12:41 | 3 |
|
I know you probably know this already, but that's about the capacity
of Fenway...
|
88.1980 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Jun 05 1995 13:15 | 7 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1977 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI "The dream is always the same..." >>>
> 33,000 that's it... too bad they can't even draw when they are winning.
No, it was in the 33 thousands. Less than 1000 short of the capacity.
George
|
88.1981 | or did the catcher let Mo thru and wait for the next train? | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Jun 05 1995 14:49 | 7 |
| George was that the night Greenwell threw a runner out at the plate?
Or was it saturday? I've noticed throughout his career that greenwell
is very effective at keeping runners from getting the extra base.
Granted this is mostly leftfield in fenway and throw needs to be
accurate more than hard but he seems to get it done. And didn't Vaughn
score a game-winner from second base on a hit to left?
|
88.1982 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Jun 05 1995 14:56 | 6 |
| Yes, Mo scored the winning run Friday night but I think it was Saturday that
Greenwell got his putout. It wasn't exactly tough for Mo to score, the ball
was hit into the left field corner and by the time it stopped banging off the
walls and Braggs ran it down, Mo was able to stroll across the plate.
George
|
88.1983 | Greenwell is mud | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Jun 05 1995 16:41 | 3 |
| Well how difficult then was the Greenwell play.
M.U.D. = Most Underrated Defensively
|
88.1984 | Who's on the Hill (6-9-95) | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Wed Jun 07 1995 11:39 | 3 |
| Does anyone know who will be the Red Sox starting pitcher on
Friday 6-9? I have 4 seats behind home plate and would love
to watch Wakefield's knuckler.
|
88.1985 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Jun 07 1995 11:51 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 88.1984 by WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M >>>
> Does anyone know who will be the Red Sox starting pitcher on
> Friday 6-9? I have 4 seats behind home plate and would love
> to watch Wakefield's knuckler.
Right now it seems to be Clemens, Zane Smith, Wakefield, Hansen, other which
from 2 June lines up with Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday
Wednesday Thursday Friday
Looks like you're in luck.
George
|
88.1986 | As long as they keep swinging and missing, something's left | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 08 1995 12:00 | 18 |
|
Well, Roger looked pretty damned sharp last night over the 5 innings he
put in (he's still on the limited pitch count). 8 Ks, only 2 hits. I
think this is the key point pertaining to Clemens and what he does over
the rest of his career: he's 32, and while he doesn't have the
durability he once did, he is still very much a power pitcher (he's
always been a control pitcher too). I think he's far from done...
From consummate professional Tony Phillips:
"I thought there were some bad pitches where I was called out but that's
not the way Larry (McCoy) saw it," said Phillips. "But that's not to take
anything away from Roger. He can still hum the ball up there. You still
get nervous when you face him."
glenn
|
88.1987 | Pena a Red Sox? | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Watch out, kids are out of school! | Thu Jun 08 1995 12:07 | 6 |
| Did the Sox sign Alejandro(sp) Pena? His son was in my daughters choir
last year, and I used to see him at church fairly regularly. Haven't
seem him in months. Someone at the church thought they heard that
Boston had signed him.
UMDan
|
88.1988 | YUP | SALEM::DODA | Chairman of the Bored | Thu Jun 08 1995 12:10 | 1 |
|
|
88.1989 | just my opinion | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Jun 08 1995 12:19 | 6 |
| > I think he's far from done...
I didn't see anyone write that he's "done". I believe he's not over-powering
anymore, and because of his control, hittable. And the biggest concern
has to be the physical strength left in the arm. He's had nagging problems
the last 2-3 years and that appears to show up in the late innings.
|
88.1990 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Shoo bop, Shewaa | Thu Jun 08 1995 13:48 | 4 |
| Joe,
I happened to make the game last night (late,drat) but for the
three innings I saw the angels were barely fouling it off and were very
late getting around.
|
88.1991 | "Hittable" == lowest BA against in AL last year | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 08 1995 14:28 | 21 |
|
> I didn't see anyone write that he's "done". I believe he's not over-powering
> anymore, and because of his control, hittable.
Last year he had 168 Ks in 170 IP, and a league-low .203 BA against.
I don't know what more can be expected in order to be considered
"overpowering", but no one else in the AL did much better. With
Clemens, everything is compared with 1986, and the superhuman standard
applies.
> He's had nagging problems
> the last 2-3 years and that appears to show up in the late innings.
Clemens' biggest problem (pitching, apart from injury) in the last
2-3 years has been a tendency to be too fine with his pitches
expecting little run support from his teammates, and hence giving
up a few more walks than usual followed by the big extra-base hit.
That usually has occurred in the early innings, 1st or 2nd, not late...
glenn
|
88.1992 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:11 | 5 |
88.1993 | he didn't used to give up extra base hits | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:21 | 17 |
| > Last year he had 168 Ks in 170 IP, and a league-low .203 BA against.
> I don't know what more can be expected in order to be considered
> "overpowering", but no one else in the AL did much better.
Well I guess his only trouble comes when he pitches against the Yankees,
then. This is when I see him most, and they seem to have gotten to him
regularly over the last 3-4 years.
re: comparing him to '86
I don't compare him to one season, but I do compare him to he period
of '86-90. We all do. No one makes the Hall on 4 good years. And
Boston fans regard him as being the same pitcher, and IMO he isn't.
Maybe he'll regain that dominance this year (very short year for him),
but my guess is he'll continue the same pattern as recent years,
especially after they start pushing him again (ie: more innings).
|
88.1994 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 08 1995 16:12 | 21 |
|
> I don't compare him to one season, but I do compare him to he period
> of '86-90. We all do. No one makes the Hall on 4 good years.
That's 5 seasons, and then he won the Cy in 1991, and added another
ERA title in 1992. "4 good years" is not close to an accurate
synopsis of Clemens' career. That sounds like Rick Rhoden or someone.
Compare Clemens with Seaver at the same point in his career; he's
right there. And Seaver truly did become less than overpowering over
his last 8-9 seasons, winning what he did (and also losing much more
often) on pitching smarts. Clemens' fastball is not yet gone, so who
knows how he'll finish up.
There has been no "pattern" on Clemens in recent years; he had one
down season, 1993, and righted himself last year. If his 1994
numbers or his stuff last night is any indication, the pattern is
encouraging. He's babying himself a bit more as opposed to the
abuse of the Joe Morgan Era, but that's just being smart.
glenn
|
88.1995 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | JJS the BucketsMaster | Thu Jun 08 1995 16:18 | 5 |
|
I'm trying to be quiet but this hero-worship is getting to me.
Thank God tomorrow is friday............
;^)
|
88.1996 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 08 1995 16:39 | 18 |
|
> How many times has Clemens injured his shoulder in the past 3 years?
> In my experience, it never heals quite the same and the probability
> of injury increases each time he hurts it.
Since the 1985 injury, there's never been a tear, as with Gooden,
Hershiser and others. Just tendinitis. The 1993 injury was a
groin pull. The probability of injury _is_ increased (how many
pitchers do put up consistent 250-IP seasons after age 32?) but so
far, in the proof of the results, the shoulder tendinitis has not
appreciably cut down the strikeouts or general effectiveness. I
was worried about this latest setback because whenever there's a
shoulder problem, sure, it very well could be the fatal rotator
cuff tear, but apparently the rotator is fine.
glenn
|
88.1997 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Jun 12 1995 12:00 | 26 |
|
I had the good fortune Friday night to be sitting with my
six year old nephew in section 43 row L seats 7 and 8. That's
twelve rows directly behind home plate. To my immediate left
was a gentlemen who looked an awful lot like Bill Cosby being
interviewed and I really thought it was him although I didn't
want to stare and be rude. He concluded his interview and grabbed
the seat next to me as the game started. In the second inning Mo
Vaughn gets up to bat and the guy, who I now realize is too big
to be Cosby, wave to each other discreetly. A couple of more innings
go by and I strike up a short conversation with the guy. "You seem
to know Mo Vaughn," I say. "Yep," He says. Are you a friend or a rel-
ative?" "Relative." "And...?" "I'm Mo Vaugn's father.""I thought
so," says I. " I turned to my nephew, "Sammy this is Mo Vaughn's
father." "Sammy is a big fan of your son," I said turning back to
Mr Vaughn. And it was true. "That's great Let me shake your hand ,
young man." Needless to say Sammy was beaming. At this point it's
early in the sixth and not long after the beam had worn off and
Sammy wanted to go home which would have been cool but Wakefield
was throwing a no hitter. I managed to stave Sammy off for another
inning but I had to leave in the seventh with it still a no hitter.
I rushed to the car to find out what had happened and unfortunately
for Wakefield he lost his no-no. All in all a really nice night at
the park.
|
88.1998 | :-) | SALEM::DODA | Bob Kraft, man of beneficence | Mon Jun 12 1995 12:08 | 1 |
| Tommy, did he get an autograph?
|
88.1999 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Herring, SS-283, In Memoriam | Mon Jun 12 1995 12:22 | 10 |
| Tommy,
That's cool. It's always nice to meet someone's family like that and have them
turn out to be nice people.
Mo's from Norwalk CT so his dad must've driven up.....
'Saw
|
88.2000 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Mon Jun 12 1995 13:03 | 1 |
| The fall has begun.
|
88.2001 | Sox will be Okay | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Mon Jun 12 1995 13:25 | 11 |
| I was also at Fenway Friday night but 5 rows behind home plate
and 3 rows in front of me was Mike Greenwells wife and 3 kids.
I was disappointed that Wakefield lost his no-hitter and shutout
but he got the win. I was relieved when he came out to pitch the
ninth and not Ken Ryan. I understand that Wakefield wants to
pitch both games of a double header! Maybe someone can confirm
this but I think only one other pitcher has ever done that.
The Boston fans showed alot of class when they gave McGwire
a standing ovation during the ballgame after going deep 5 times
in 2 days.
|
88.2002 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Jun 12 1995 13:27 | 4 |
|
You weren't the guy, who kept standing up and doing those
herky-jerky motions with his arms every time Stweart went into
his windup, were you?
|
88.2003 | I was wearing my Auth. Red Sox Jersey | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Mon Jun 12 1995 13:42 | 5 |
| No, I was the guy sitting next to the guy with the radar gun,
clocking the pitchers. I noticed 2 guys using a stopwatch?
He would start it when Stewart released the ball and stop it
when it reached the plate . . . what is that used for?
|
88.2004 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Mon Jun 12 1995 13:58 | 17 |
|
re .2003,
Usually they start the stop watch, when the pitcher starts his
motion. So they can time him for stolen base attempts. Does his
motion slow down for curve balls or split finger fastballs? Things
like that.
In your case they could be verifing the radar gun. Mathmatically
you should be able to say the ball went x feet in x amount of time.
So you can figure out how many MPH the ball was going.
Tommy,
So your the one who jinx Wakefield and caused him to lose
his no-no. Leaving the ball park when a no hitter is going on? It was
a Friday night, let the kid fall asleep in his seat. :^)
Ron
|
88.2005 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:12 | 10 |
|
> I understand that Wakefield wants to
> pitch both games of a double header! Maybe someone can confirm
> this but I think only one other pitcher has ever done that.
I can't confirm it, but I can deny it. It was once, back near the
turn of the century, not uncommon. It hasn't been done for a long
time, though.
Joe
|
88.2006 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:15 | 10 |
|
> I can't confirm it, but I can deny it. It was once, back near the
> turn of the century, not uncommon. It hasn't been done for a long
> time, though.
Wilbur Wood did it in the early 1970s, maybe even a couple times. I
believe he may have even completed both halves of the doubleheader...
glenn
|
88.2007 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:39 | 10 |
|
>> So your the one who jinx Wakefield and caused him to lose
>> his no-no. Leaving the ball park when a no hitter is going
>> on? It was a Friday night, let the kid fall asleep in his seat. :^)
I wish he would have fallen a sleep but that wasn't happening.
He was in tired whiney mode and he can go like that for quite
awhile and I didn't want to subject the people near me to it.
He started late in the fifth and I managed to squeeze almost an
inning and a half out of him.
|
88.2008 | Reminds me of Ty Cobb | AKOCOA::BREEN | Shoo bop, Shewaa | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:53 | 16 |
| Ironically on that list of 5 hrs in two days is Ty Cobb and if I'm not
incorrect Babe Ruth, Ted Williams and many big name sluggers never did
it. Despite his personal unpopularity he garnered the most votes for hall
of fame ahead of Ruth,Wagner,Mathewson and Johnson.
One of the worst marks against him was his blatant antipathy to blacks
which included outright violence. The fact that he hated just about
everyone and committed acts of violence in every strata of society
certainly doesn't help. And even if actual proof that he bet on a
baseball game never surfaced his defense of same acknowledged that he
knew of betting and fixing and tacitly "condoned" it for which Buck
Weaver was banned.
But poor Buck didn't have a half dozen U.S. Senators (the only club
that could stand him) ready to jump in on his behalf and strike down
the reserve clause if he were banned.
|
88.2009 | | ONOFRE::MAY_BR | Mich fightsong=1bourbon,1scotch &1beer | Mon Jun 12 1995 16:23 | 12 |
| > Wilbur Wood did it in the early 1970s, maybe even a couple times. I
> believe he may have even completed both halves of the doubleheader...
> glenn
Glenn, I believe Wood completed the end of a tied game that had been
called due to rain, and then started the next game, which was scheduled
for the same day. Impressive, but I'm pretty sure he
never started both halves of a scheduled doubleheader.
brews
|
88.2010 | "Bucketeers...95'-96' FFL Champs!!!" | CNTROL::SALMON | | Mon Jun 12 1995 16:56 | 7 |
| Wilbur Wood DID start and complete both games of a double header in the
70's. I believe he also won both of them. Wilbur was originally from
Norwood MA.
JS
|
88.2011 | | ONOFRE::MAY_BR | Mich fightsong=1bourbon,1scotch &1beer | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:15 | 5 |
|
Check it out, I'm sure it was the completion of a suspended game.
Being a fellow left-handed rag-arm, I was a pretty big Wilur Wood fan.
brews
|
88.2012 | Lockwood was actually signed as 3rd baseman | AKOCOA::BREEN | Da,Dah Duh, de.. Goodnight (Orlando) | Mon Jun 12 1995 18:39 | 3 |
| Wilbur Wood was from Belmont, Lockwood,Travers and (non-pitcher) Hebner
were from Norwood. That's Belmont High not Belmont Hill a la Toby
Kimball.
|
88.2013 | trust me on this one | OUTSRC::HEISER | Maranatha! | Mon Jun 12 1995 18:49 | 5 |
88.2014 | Baltimore chop is another one with a new meaning | AKOCOA::BREEN | Da,Dah Duh, de.. Goodnight (Orlando) | Mon Jun 12 1995 18:55 | 6 |
| No Phillip doesn't do much food wise, fruit rollups maybe. His big
food is corn - I can just see some old timer remark as Whiten goes back
for a fly ball: "Can of corn" and Phillip saying "Yes!!!" and having to
explain..
Of course if it was Baltimore he could have corn on the cob.
|
88.2015 | Spawrts Bawrs are great on a hot day | OUTSRC::HEISER | Maranatha! | Mon Jun 12 1995 21:10 | 8 |
88.2016 | couldn't resist | ONOFRE::MAY_BR | Mich fightsong=1bourbon,1scotch &1beer | Mon Jun 12 1995 21:23 | 8 |
| > My 5-year old managed to last 9 innings in the right field sun on a
> hot
Obviously your kid inherited his father's athletic talent to be playing
in RF, Mike. 8^)
brews
|
88.2017 | Ken CRYIN Ryan | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Tue Jun 13 1995 08:16 | 15 |
88.2018 | now to wash out my mouth | AD::HEATH | Don't get to excited yet | Tue Jun 13 1995 08:25 | 6 |
|
I hate it when I have to agree with anyone from Cleveland.
Jerry
|
88.2019 | Candlepins live!!!! | SHRMSG::GALVIN | knockemdownspinemrounheygobowling | Tue Jun 13 1995 09:42 | 15 |
| re;
================================================================================
Note 88.2012 Boston Red Sox 2012 of 2018
AKOCOA::BREEN "Da,Dah Duh, de.. Goodnight (Orlando)" 3 lines 12-JUN-1995 17:39
-< Lockwood was actually signed as 3rd baseman >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
vvvvvvv
Wilbur Wood was from Belmont, Lockwood,Travers and (non-pitcher) Hebner
were from Norwood. That's Belmont High not Belmont Hill a la Toby
Kimball.
AKA, Billy Travers......Excellent CANDLEPIN BOWLER!!!!!!
RTG
|
88.2020 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Tue Jun 13 1995 10:09 | 7 |
|
The end of the month isn't soon enough. Ryan should be sent down
NOW!!!!!!! He was put in a no pressure situation during Saturday's
game. Sox trailing 4-1 in the ninth, Ryan comes in and give up 4 more
runs.
Ron
|
88.2021 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Herring, SS-283, In Memoriam | Tue Jun 13 1995 10:10 | 8 |
| > The end of the month isn't soon enough. Ryan should be sent down
> NOW!!!!!!! He was put in a no pressure situation during Saturday's
> game. Sox trailing 4-1 in the ninth, Ryan comes in and give up 4 more
> runs.
And this tells me that Kennedy is even more like Butch than I originally
thought.
|
88.2022 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 13 1995 11:05 | 7 |
| Ryan runs hot and cold. When he's on he racks up the saves, when he's off he
gets pounded.
I'm hoping that Ryan and Mesa both stay around and rack up more saves to add
to the bunch they've got already.
George
|
88.2023 | As if it ain't frustrating enough to watch modern ballplayers | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ta,ta,ta,ta,ta... History | Tue Jun 13 1995 12:45 | 9 |
| Why do they have to switch the camera to the plate to show the runner
crossing the plate even when the action is elsewhere. As far as I know
this is a Channel 38 anomaly and just plain stupid. Not to speak of
maddenly frustrating.
The only other thing as bad is a ball hit down the right field line in
Fenway with triple written on it that gets interfered with by a fan.
If those fans are going to try to touch those balls they should put
barbed wire up.
|
88.2024 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 13 1995 13:31 | 5 |
|
I think the rule is that they always try to show when someone scores. They
know they can always go back and pick up any other action on replay.
George
|
88.2028 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same... | Tue Jun 13 1995 14:15 | 6 |
88.2029 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 13 1995 14:21 | 5 |
| I could care less if the mail the pitches home, as long as they both keep
racking up saves I'm happy.
:*)}
George
|
88.2030 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 13 1995 14:24 | 14 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2027 by PTOSS1::JACOBR "Certifiably Insane" >>>
> Jest givin' ya back some of yer own medicine.
>
> (8^)*
I think the moderator asked us to stop this debate. Don't make the mistake
of thinking that you won just because you got the last blow in before he
called a halt.
And sneaking in yet another blow over a smiley face doesn't really fool
anyone.
George
|
88.2031 | So it's okay? | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ta,ta,ta,ta,ta... History | Tue Jun 13 1995 16:58 | 10 |
| > <<< Note 88.2024 by HELIX::MAIEWSKI >>>
>
>
> I think the rule is that they always try to show when someone scores.
>They know they can always go back and pick up any other action on replay.
>
Yeh, and I'm saying this is exceptionally dumb and infuriating to
the viewer. Why don't they just show previews of pocahontas during the
5th inning and then replay the inning highlights.
|
88.2032 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 13 1995 17:08 | 18 |
| I don't think it's really all that dumb to show the scores. They try to
show the scores on all coverage of TV sports.
- In football and basketball they always follow the ball so that you can see
the score live then they go back and show you the other action on replay.
- In hockey they always follow the puck so that you can see the score live
then they go back and show you the other action on replay.
- In golf they always try to show the putts live so you can see what the guy
scored on the hole then they go back and show other shots (maybe) on
replay.
I can't think of a sport off hand where they don't try to show what ever is
being recorded as a score live. And with instant replay what's the difference?
If they have it on tape they can show it easily after the play.
George
|
88.2033 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Get Well Mickey | Tue Jun 13 1995 17:18 | 8 |
|
Big Difference in all them other sports you mentioned the ball or
puck are always either doing the scoring or being carried across the
goal line.
Chap
|
88.2034 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jun 13 1995 17:39 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2033 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Get Well Mickey" >>>
> Big Difference in all them other sports you mentioned the ball or
> puck are always either doing the scoring or being carried across the
> goal line.
Exactly, and the rule seems to be, always show the score. That's why they
follow the ball in those games but not in baseball.
But look at it the other way. Imagine the complaints they'd get if they
didn't show the guys scoring runs. I can see the columns now "can you believe
WAFU? The score of yesterday's game was 2-1 and they didn't show us a single
guy crossing the plate".
Telling directors "always show the scores" is easy. Telling them to skip
the scores if something else is more interesting would be at best confusing
and many times they'd end up with nothing. For example, imagine how quick
a director would have to be to anticipate a cut off and throw to 2nd. Most
likely it would all happen so fast that most viewers would not be sure what
they were looking at after the switch so they'd have to replay it anyway.
George
|
88.2035 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ta,ta,ta,ta,ta... History | Tue Jun 13 1995 17:57 | 15 |
| In basketball,football and hockey they are following the ball; it's
only in baseball that they stop following the ball to switch to
something unrelated to the action. And what's the big problem about
showing the scoreboard? Is this another tv "thing" like the nfl
blackout one team one network baloney.
"Always see the replay"! Argh!!! why not just tape the whole thing,
read a book while listening to the radio and surf thru the game later.
Live action is what it's all about.
btw that replay action absolutely ruined me for live redsox viewing.
I'm used to not paying attention and action in baseball is so sporadic
that you have to concentrate or miss it. I suppose even the parks have
the replay but by that time I was back gabbing again (about how
worthless modern players are).
|
88.2036 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Tue Jun 13 1995 19:07 | 7 |
|
How about a simple answer? Split screen where the big part shows the
ball and play, and the small part shows the run being scored. Simple
huh, guess it will never happen then...8^)
Marc
|
88.2037 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Jun 14 1995 10:36 | 37 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2035 by AKOCOA::BREEN "Ta,ta,ta,ta,ta... History" >>>
> In basketball,football and hockey they are following the ball; it's
> only in baseball that they stop following the ball to switch to
> something unrelated to the action.
Scoring runs is not part of the action?
>And what's the big problem about
> showing the scoreboard? Is this another tv "thing" like the nfl
> blackout one team one network baloney.
I've seen the score board on TV. I've heard announcers give the scores many
times and if you watch on ESPN they often run other scores of not only baseball
but other sports as well.
> "Always see the replay"! Argh!!! why not just tape the whole thing,
> read a book while listening to the radio and surf thru the game later.
> Live action is what it's all about.
There's a big difference. If you read a book and watch afterwards by then
the entire game is history. And besides then you run into the same problem
of only being able to look at what the director wants to show you.
Replay happens moments after the play, while the outcome of the game is not
known (unless it's a game ending play) and while the play and situation are
still fresh in your mind. Also it happens when there is a pause in the action
and there's not much to look at anyway.
But now that I think about it there have been times when they show other
action. I've seen situations with no out, a runner at 3rd, and ground ball to
the infield where they showed the put out at 1st or double play rather than
the run. In fact I remember once not too long ago when that happened and they
never got around to saying if the run scored. I had to wait until the end of
the inning to find out the score. I think that was a Braves game.
George
|
88.2038 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:12 | 36 |
|
> Scoring runs is not part of the action?
No, but in many situations, the act of the runner
crossing home plate is a foregone conclusion, while
other things occuring during the play are not.
For example...
Runner on 3rd. Batter hits a crisp line
drive to the gap that is obviously a hit,
and the runner on 3rd is going to score
easily. In the meantime, you've got the
outfielder trying to cut the ball off in
the gap to prevent extra bases. Even if
he does, a fast runner may try to stretch
the hit into a double anyway. The throw
comes in from the outfield to 2nd, and a
very close tag play occurs at 2nd base.
I think what people are saying here is that
live camera coverage of the runner on 3rd touching
home plate is of the lowest priority of the multiple
threads of activity occuring in this play, and that
if it's going to interrupt viewing of the ball being
cut off in the gap or of the tag play at 2nd, then
they'd just as soon not have it.
Seeing either the outfielder's play or the tag play
at 2nd on replay isn't nearly as good - at the point
when you see the replay, the suspense is gone since
you already know the final result. In this situation,
if I'm going to see the runner touching home at all,
I'd just as soon see it on the replay since there was
no suspense surrounding that part of the play.
Roland
|
88.2039 | There is an answer why they do it | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ta,ta,ta,ta,ta... History | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:21 | 49 |
|
> Scoring runs is not part of the action?
I'm talking about those instances where it is not part of the action,
the action (and there's precious little of it) is often occurring
elsewhere, we know that the runner ahead of the runner going into
third (fe) is scoring unopposed because the ball and runner are at 3rd
base.
> I've seen the score board on TV. I've heard announcers give the scores many
> times and if you watch on ESPN they often run other scores of not only baseball
> other sports as well.
So, why do they feel they have to show the score when it's not part of
the action. I do agree that keeping track of the score a la fenway
park with yellow for in-progress and running score is necessary with
careless announcers who want to criticize greenwell not tell the score.
> Replay happens moments after the play, while the outcome of the game is not
>known (unless it's a game ending play) and while the play and situation are
>still fresh in your mind. Also it happens when there is a pause in the action
>and there's not much to look at anyway.
The why not show that exciting event, a runner crossing the plate while
there is a slide into second or third where the ball and runner arrive
simultaneiously. Make the replay of the runner crossing the plate.
Besides, today replay seems to be at the whim of producer/broadcaster
and they're trying to cut the number down.
> But now that I think about it there have been times when they show other
>action. I've seen situations with no out, a runner at 3rd, and ground ball to
>the infield where they showed the put out at 1st or double play rather than
>the run. In fact I remember once not too long ago when that happened and they
>never got around to saying if the run scored. I had to wait until the end of
>the inning to find out the score. I think that was a Braves game.
You're supposed to know, if it's a force play the run doesn't score. If
it's not then it's by sequence of event and somebody has to tell you
or score has to be posted and seeing the plate touched doesn't help at
all.
All I'm asking is on a play such as a drive to the outfield with
runners on second or third scoring easily, I want the camera to pan the
outfield play and the runner chugging to third and not be distracted by
seeing players walking over homeplate. ESPN doesn't do it, networks
don't do, I don't recall seeing tbs or pix doit, just this infernal,
stupid practice of ch 38 and I want them to cut it out.
|
88.2040 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:31 | 9 |
| > All I'm asking is on a play such as a drive to the outfield with
> runners on second or third scoring easily, I want the camera to pan the
> outfield play and the runner chugging to third and not be distracted by
> seeing players walking over homeplate. ESPN doesn't do it, networks
> don't do, I don't recall seeing tbs or pix doit, just this infernal,
> stupid practice of ch 38 and I want them to cut it out.
Bill, I really think that you need to stop waffling and stake out a
position on this... :-)
|
88.2041 | And everyone will know his name | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ta,ta,ta,ta,ta... History | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:36 | 7 |
| r,
One of my really big sport peeves, drives me crazy everytime it
happens. And not to cut of George but I know the reason they do it.
Some micro-manager at 38 has either observed it happening or is afraid
that some day the winning run will cross the plate clinching the
pennant and the camera will be elsewhere and he will be the Bill
Buckner of Technical Producers.
|
88.2042 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:46 | 8 |
|
re .2038
Makes a whole lot of sense to me. I also never understood why they
show a run that is a foregone conclusion crossing the plate and miss
the close play at second. You see that much less on the cable stations
and networks than you do on tv 38. Of course you-know-who will come
back with a "yeah, but..." if for no other reason than to prolong a LDUC.
|
88.2043 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ta,ta,ta,ta,ta... History | Wed Jun 14 1995 12:48 | 15 |
| Tommy,
No, I really think that George likes to watch a game while reading
a book or carrying a conversation on with his wife about the coming
flower show and if he hears action checks out the tv replay. That's
all perfectly legitimate and another point of view.
I'm coming from a different fan perspective altogether. I want to
see the play as it happens, tell (who Phillip?, my wife, God??) someone
"See I told you he'd find the gap", then argue the call and tell (?)
that in my day the runner would have used a hook slide, the fielder
couldn't wave his glove and have the ump call him out because his
reservations at hojos were for 10pm and the union says he doesn't have
to hang around.
billte
|
88.2044 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Jun 14 1995 14:26 | 12 |
| Actually that's about right. I'm more interested in who did what and who is
likely to do what rather than seeing it 1/4 to 1/2 a second after it really
happened.
I like to watch baseball from the general manager point of view and think of
it as a dusty chess game both at the manager and gm level. I'm a bit more
interested in whether they will bring in a new pitcher, who a team needs,
player transactions (i.e. what to do about the guy who went on the DL, etc.)
than seeing plays in real time (delayed slightly of course due to the speed of
light).
George
|
88.2045 | A petition, that's the ticket | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ta,ta,ta,ta,ta... History | Wed Jun 14 1995 14:51 | 6 |
| So who actually makes the decision on which camera shot to put on the
screen, is that the technical producer, camera fore-person, production
supervisor?
I need it for the petition to be signed by Tommy, myself, Glenn... to
be sent to Channel 38 to end "this deplorable practice".
|
88.2046 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Wed Jun 14 1995 15:15 | 14 |
| > I need it for the petition to be signed by Tommy, myself, Glenn... to
> be sent to Channel 38 to end "this deplorable practice".
You can add me to the list - I agree that it must be stopped...
George, given .2044, I think I understand your position a little better, and
why the "crossing the plate" shot doesn't bother you. But it sounds like you
enjoy the "Rotisserie" components of the game more than the playing of the game
itself. I'm a little more into how I felt as an outfielder when someone tried
to take an extra base on me (or as the person trying to take the base) - what
they're thinking and the physical execution of those thoughts.
Neither approach is right or wrong - it's just that I'll sign Billte's
petition, and you won't... :-)
|
88.2047 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Jun 14 1995 15:32 | 19 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2045 by AKOCOA::BREEN "Ta,ta,ta,ta,ta... History" >>>
> So who actually makes the decision on which camera shot to put on the
> screen, is that the technical producer, camera fore-person, production
> supervisor?
The director makes that call on a moment by moment basis but the Producer
is the director's boss and can set policy for the director to follow.
RE <<< Note 88.2046 by IMBETR::DUPREZ >>>
>George, given .2044, I think I understand your position a little better, and
>why the "crossing the plate" shot doesn't bother you. But it sounds like you
>enjoy the "Rotisserie" components of the game more than the playing of the game
>itself.
Exactly.
George
|
88.2048 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 14 1995 17:23 | 12 |
|
>>But it sounds like you
>>enjoy the "Rotisserie" components of the game more than the playing of the game
>>itself.
>
> Exactly.
There are cures for this disease, if diagnosed early enough...
glenn
|
88.2049 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Herring, SS-283, In Memoriam | Thu Jun 15 1995 09:40 | 4 |
| Any word on Greenwell, who got a rugby-style neck jam the other evening?
'Saw
|
88.2050 | Red Sox 27-17 | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Thu Jun 15 1995 10:15 | 3 |
| Greenwell wanted to play last night but Kennedy convinced him
to take the night off. He will be back friday night when the
Sox host the Brewers for a 3-game series.
|
88.2051 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 15 1995 10:28 | 4 |
| Seems Greenwell is always banging his head then coming back a day or so
later.
George
|
88.2052 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Herring, SS-283, In Memoriam | Thu Jun 15 1995 10:38 | 22 |
| >
> Seems Greenwell is always banging his head then coming back a day or so
>later.
>
At the get together we initially laughed about him, saying he had Al Toon's
Disease, but when we saw the replay we realized this was a neck jam and not
really a head bang.
On a couple of occasions I had similar things happen when I was playing rugby.
Not at full-speed like Greenwell, but usually setting in a scrum, or coming
in late to a ruck, and it hurts like hell. You get a "zinger" that feels like
someone stuck a cattle prod right on your spinal column and it feels like
the current is running down to your tail-bone.
So I'm watching the replay (no one crossed the plate btw, 8^)8^) 8^)) and
I could almost feel it...
That one hurt.
'Saw
|
88.2053 | We can laugh about it now.... ;-) | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 15 1995 11:57 | 8 |
|
I eventually did see the replay, and, clearly, that ball should have
been caught by Greenwell (more so than the ill-fated effort from
Opening Day, 1994). As with that game, had he caught the ball, I
think the injury would have been less severe...
glenn
|
88.2054 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Golet, SS-361, In Memoriam | Thu Jun 15 1995 12:31 | 7 |
| Yeah, he should have caught it. Had he caught it, he probably would have taken
much of the impact on his back, I think.....
Mike Greenwell is the Al Toon of baseball.....
'Saw
|
88.2055 | | SMART2::CHILDS | JJS the BucketsMaster | Thu Jun 15 1995 12:44 | 2 |
| Atleast Al Toon used to hang on to the ball. Mike Greenwall's more like
Ernest Gray............
|
88.2056 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Golet, SS-361, In Memoriam | Thu Jun 15 1995 12:55 | 13 |
| > Atleast Al Toon used to hang on to the ball. Mike Greenwall's more like
> Ernest Gray............
Well, sort of.
If I remember right, Ernest Gray would make these unbelievable catches in
traffic when there were all kinds of people around him. It was when he was
wide open, no one near him for 20 yards, and nothing but green turf between
him and 6, and he'd drop the ball....8^)
Course, I am getting old and senile.....
|
88.2057 | Bucketeers intimidate Pinky's Slugs!!!! | CNTROL::SALMON | | Thu Jun 15 1995 14:58 | 7 |
| Greenwell should have caught that ball and if he did I bet he would
have never left the game. The guy's a phony.
JS
|
88.2058 | AL East continues to be mediocre, muddled... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jun 21 1995 10:19 | 9 |
|
Yes, before Groaner gets too wound up, the Sox are listing pretty badly
these days. Fortunately, the Damn Yanks continue to be putrid and are
gaining no ground over this stretch. They blew, what, a 7-2 lead last
night to a Baltimore team that had lost 7 straight coming into the
Yankee series?
glenn
|
88.2059 | | CAMONE::WAY | USS Bonefish, SS-223, In Memoriam | Wed Jun 21 1995 11:17 | 12 |
| I've never expected anything of this team this season.
I questioned their choice of Kennedy as a manager, and he seems to have
confirmed my suspicions. He's a Butch in manager's clothing.
They were overachieving in a classic "SPORTS" sense, and now reality is coming
home.
As my father said "August came early this year."
'SAw
|
88.2060 | Should only be 4 down... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | D. A. R. R. Y. L. | Wed Jun 21 1995 11:30 | 7 |
|
Too bad the Rest of the AL East is playing just as Putrid!!!
Chap
|
88.2061 | Some things just don't change | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Jun 21 1995 12:58 | 10 |
| They had a horrid game last night with Alicea making two mistakes,
Greenwell fumbling a ball (then having a nice assist later) and overall
just not playing well.
They seem to miss O'Leary, I hope they get him in the lineup when he's
healthy again - I think he plays cf better than any of them.
Funny Joe Morgan used to say that the Sox are a simple team, when they
hit they're great when they don't they stink. Currently they can't
hit a lick.
|
88.2062 | | PSDVAX::ROBICHAUD | Do You Believe Now! | Thu Jun 22 1995 08:42 | 7 |
| Poor, poor Jose Canseco. Traumatized by a crowd/mob or 30/200 fans
after the PawSox game Monday night. And this happened after he was
mercilessly booed by these unforgiving ingrates, despite trying his best.
Yet another victim of "minor league mob mentality". What do people want
from this man?
/Don
|
88.2063 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Yanks RULE, Tribe SUCKS! | Thu Jun 22 1995 08:45 | 4 |
88.2064 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Thu Jun 22 1995 09:17 | 11 |
|
> Jose responded by saying the fans were the least knowledgeable he
> ever encountered...
Yep, when you need a clear, well-thought out discussion on the history,
purity, and strategy of baseball, you go straight to Jose Canseco.
I read the article in the Glove(tm). I couldn't stop laughing.
Jose should have taken the time spent ranting and raving and used it on
more BP.
|
88.2065 | When is Canseco gonna show up to play? | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Thu Jun 22 1995 10:53 | 6 |
| Jose should be booed, the guy was brought in here for his
long ball ability and to put fans in the seats and he has
done neither! The guy can't bat his weight (.191). He said
he will never play in Pawtucket again, even in the annual
Boston/Pawtucket game they play every year.
|
88.2066 | Jose always brings along his own comic relief... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jun 22 1995 15:32 | 10 |
|
> I read the article in the Glove(tm). I couldn't stop laughing.
Jose hisself provided the best line of all when he referred to
Pawtucketans as "neanderthals", beating on his truck with "their
clubs". That's a little known fack about Rhode Island; it's
inhabited largely by cavemen...
glenn
|
88.2067 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jul 05 1995 13:12 | 24 |
|
> Hey Chap, how was your weekend?! Mine was pretty good. Round about
> the 9th inning yesterday, BelindaStandardTime, I was starting to feel
> a little sick, but by the time my daughter Becky left the park with a
> Mike Macfarlane HR ball in her pocket I knew that all was again right
> with the world. Many people left Fenway happy yesterday but none
> more so than that little girl...
In about the only positive note from Saturday's 11-2 debacle against
the Tigers, we managed to get this ball autographed by Mike Mac behind
the Sox bullpen, after the game ("Becky-- My Best-- Mike Macfarlane").
Unlike that swollen-headed Spanky Lavalliere last Patriots' Day,
Macfarlane appears to be a decent guy. I let him know early on, about
the 6th, that a little girl was in possession of a momento of one of
the few shining moments of his otherwise undistinguished career ;-),
and in a rare exception to established ballplayer postgame protocol,
he took a moment before bolting to the clubhouse to do those important
things that ballplayers must do in the clubhouse after a game...
Overall, Sox keep winning enough, ugly or otherwise, to keep things
interesting...
glenn
|
88.2068 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Wed Jul 05 1995 13:54 | 5 |
| Nice to see they aren't all as "full of themselves" as Spanky showed to be.
billl
|
88.2069 | What and is he even in pro-ball now | AD::HEATH | Tribe Rooools Sox Suck (again by the way) | Wed Jul 05 1995 16:17 | 4 |
|
I still vomit when I think about reading that post about Spanky. A
back up catch copin a 'tude. Whata slug.
|
88.2070 | This is one Happy Yankee fan!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | the Halfway House Ruth Built... | Fri Jul 07 1995 10:14 | 16 |
|
BAHHHHHHHHHHH
I didn't know Gorman was back. Trade your #1 pitching prospect
for a guy who will only be there 3 months.
Even if by some miracle they hold off Det/NYY/Bal Aggie caan't
pitch every inning vs Cle in the playoffs. Stupid move. Rodriguez will
be the real thing.
Glad to know even with Duke at the helm, the sox are still MLB
biggest joke.
|
88.2071 | RE: .2070 | IMBETR::DUPREZ | | Fri Jul 07 1995 10:26 | 30 |
|
I'm probably one of the few people who likes it. Here's why:
1) It's past July 4th. You're in first place. You're playing for *this* year.
Yes, the Tribe are a better team. But you never know - might as well put
yourself in the position to try and beat them.
2) In doing this, you patch your #1 problem area.
3) If Murray is the PTBNL, that's fine. I'm not convinced of his upside - I
think he's already 26 or 27. Excellent power, but how far in the future
do you see him contributing significantly to the big club?
4) Losing Rodriguez hurts, but you have to give up value to get value. He's
not in the rotation, and he hasn't shown the ability to close games (yet).
5) When Ken Ryan re-visits the bigs, he goes back to set-up man, where he's
*much* more effective. Ditto for Stan Belinda. You haven't just plugged
the closer spot, you've strengthened most of your relief.
6) If there's a team that can pony up the cash to keep Aguilera, it's the
Red Sox. (It's sure not the Twins...)
Even if it doesn't work out, this is nowhere near the magnitude of the
Jeff Bagwell for Larry Andersen gaffe.
I think you were the guy I just saw in the hallway here at NQO and asked
about the trade throw-in...
Roland
|
88.2072 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Fri Jul 07 1995 10:49 | 18 |
| Chappy,
I'll agree with you that the Sox aren't as good as the Indians. But I
think Suppan is the Sox #1 pitching prospect and not Frankie. I think
Frankie will be a good pitcher and Minnesota is a good place for him to
develop. I think the Yanks gave up more for Wetteland.
My question is whether the Sox will forget about their rebuilding their
minor league and try to win this year. If you look at the rest of the
AL East the Yanks need 2 starters and Baltimore could use 1. Toronto is
about to have a fire sale on their top players. The Tigers have the
Offense but who knows about their pitching. I think the Sox as they are
currently structured can compete in the East but I don't think they'd
get by the first round of the playoffs. Without a closer they wouldn't
be able to compete. Now if they start to deal their more of the farm
for a Cone or any of the other starters available then you really can
ask questions about their strategy.
And BTW Chappy when is Gene going to get a pitcher or 2?
Mike
|
88.2073 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Fri Jul 07 1995 10:56 | 3 |
88.2074 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Fri Jul 07 1995 11:01 | 5 |
| I don't think so Paul. The feeling is that over the long haul Suppan
will be a better pitcher then Rodriguez. I think the organizations view
of him has diminished over this year.
|
88.2075 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Fri Jul 07 1995 11:18 | 8 |
88.2076 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | the Halfway House Ruth Built... | Fri Jul 07 1995 11:24 | 13 |
|
Love to see Rodriguez no-hit the Sox!!!
No I hope Gene doesn't trade one of our best prospects ie Rivera
Jeter Hitchcock Pettitte or the other Rivera. Now if he sends Toronto
5 Million for Cone I'd love that.
Suppan is not even close to Frankie!!!
3 years Frankie will win 15-20 with a mediocre team.
Chap
|
88.2077 | film at 11! | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Fri Jul 07 1995 11:26 | 2 |
88.2078 | Rodriguez takes Clemens DEEP! | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Fri Jul 07 1995 11:26 | 2 |
88.2079 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Jul 07 1995 11:45 | 28 |
| > I think the Yanks gave up more for Wetteland.
How so ? The Yanks didn't give up a player considered a "top prospect".
Boston just gave up a guy who has been considered their best prospect,
whether they've soured on him or not.
I think Boston did the right thing here. Although Chappy has a point,
if Aguilera walks at the end of the year.
> My question is whether the Sox will forget about their rebuilding their
> minor league and try to win this year.
Yeah, I'm sure no one in the organization expected to be dealing with
contending this year. But the rest of the AL East is down this year.
The Red Sox seem to flourish in years like this one. They've got to
take their shot at it when they get it. The more innings on Clemens' arm,
the closer Boston gets to not having him.
> And BTW Chappy when is Gene going to get a pitcher or 2?
If it's going to cost us Hitchcock, Pettitte, Jeter or Rivera, hopefully
he won't bother. As much as I want to see Mattingly in the postseason
in Yankee Stadium, I don't want to give up the future these kids have
ahead of them.
|
88.2080 | Duquette's PR machine does wonders | WORDY::NAZZARO | Bring ALexi Lalas to Boston! | Fri Jul 07 1995 13:42 | 28 |
| I like the deal, especially since I never was that high on Frankie.
However, there is one aspect of the deal that I'm worried about, and
that is that Dan Duquette made it! If he didn't have Peter Gammons as
his personal public relations man, Duquette would be getting skewered
in this town. Here are his last three one-for-one deals:
1) John Flaherty to Detroit for Rich Rowland. What a joke. Rowland
turns out to be 30, not 27, and is now in AAA. Flaherty is an
All-Star.
2) Paul Quantrill to Philadelphia for Wes Chamberlain. Quantrill has 7
wins; Chamberlain, who makes Oliver Miller look thin, is in AAA.
3) Scott Cooper to St. Louis for Mark Whiten. Cooper having typical
good Cooper year. Whiten looks great in a uniform, unlike Chamberlain.
Unfortunately, he can't play. He's in AAA.
Anyone see a pattern here?
As for his freee agent signings, he has an unlimited bank account, so
he signs every free agent who can walk. For every Troy O'Leary, there
is a Cory Snyder or a Tuffy Rhodes. But it doesn't matter because a
couple of his signees have been very pleasant surprises (Hanson and
Wakefield). If the despised Lou Gorman had pulled off a third of the
moves Duquette has, he'd have been run out of town.
NAZZ
|
88.2081 | | PSDVAX::ROBICHAUD | Do You Believe Now! | Fri Jul 07 1995 13:54 | 9 |
| Hey Nazz, I don't think Cooper is having a very good year for St.
Louis. I like the trade because if all they give up is Rodriquez and
maybe Murray it doesn't exactly deplete the farm system. Frankie is
still learning how to pitch, and whether he will or not is still open
to speculation. The only problem is the PawSox schedule has a picture
of you know who on it. The ticket office at McCoy is probably going to
run out of white out sometime today.
/Don
|
88.2082 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Fri Jul 07 1995 14:41 | 66 |
| >However, there is one aspect of the deal that I'm worried about, and
>that is that Dan Duquette made it! If he didn't have Peter Gammons as
>his personal public relations man, Duquette would be getting skewered
>in this town. Here are his last three one-for-one deals:
NAZZ, To be fair you must throw in his multi-player deals. Look at the
team the man inherited and what he has now. There is a big differance
in the talent and the makeup of the team
>1) John Flaherty to Detroit for Rich Rowland. What a joke. Rowland
>turns out to be 30, not 27, and is now in AAA. Flaherty is an
>All-Star.
Flaherty was a career AAA player at the time as was Rowland. Everyone
thought that Flaherty had the defensive skills but at no time did he
ever hit like he has.
>2) Paul Quantrill to Philadelphia for Wes Chamberlain. Quantrill has 7
>wins; Chamberlain, who makes Oliver Miller look thin, is in AAA.
Quantrill has a 4.2+ ERA right now and has been getting knocked around
lately. Last year Quantrill ended up in the Minors. Chamberlain is a
bust but Quantrill wasn't a big loss. It was a gamble at the time for a
team that didn't have a RFer. Jury is still out on Quantrill.
>3) Scott Cooper to St. Louis for Mark Whiten. Cooper having typical
>good Cooper year. Whiten looks great in a uniform, unlike Chamberlain.
>Unfortunately, he can't play. He's in AAA.
This was a multi-player deal. The Sox also got Cormier who's ERA is
3.45 and looks like now will become the 5th starter for awhile.
Also the man who replaced Cooper is having a much better year then
Cooper. I still think Whiten will come on the second half of the
season.
>Anyone see a pattern here?
Well lets add in Luis Alicea trade, the Canseco deal, Getting Lee
Tinsley for nothing, I think that he's made some bad deals and made
some good deals. He's added players who have power and speed. Which
team would you rather have? The team he inherited or the team that he
has now?
> As for his freee agent signings, he has an unlimited bank account, so
> he signs every free agent who can walk. For every Troy O'Leary, there
> is a Cory Snyder or a Tuffy Rhodes. But it doesn't matter because a
> couple of his signees have been very pleasant surprises (Hanson and
> Wakefield). If the despised Lou Gorman had pulled off a third of the
> moves Duquette has, he'd have been run out of town.
Gorman had the same unlimited bankroll but what Free Agents did he
sign? Also ket's not forget that DD had reached agreements with Appier,
Wetteland and Sosa.
Clark, Dawson, Fletcher, Young, Reardon etc. The problem is that in
all of the years Gorman was here Gorman didn't make many moves period.
The Red Sox are building from within. The talent that Duquette has
brought in is a lot better then what was given up. Duquette also has
signed most of these players to low $ contracts and has not had to give
up any compensation for his signings.
Duquette hasn't been perfect and the Red Sox have had a huge turnover
in personnel but they are farther along in their reconstruction in the
1-1/2 years of Duquette then a lot of people would have thought
Mike
|
88.2083 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Jul 07 1995 16:19 | 7 |
| > team would you rather have? The team he inherited or the team that he
> has now?
This Boston team has been *surprisingly* good this year. But therein
lies the key question: are they this good ? It's filled with previous
unknowns and guys who have had more stinkers than good years. Are they
all having terrific years at once ? What will you have next year ?
|
88.2084 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | the Halfway House Ruth Built... | Fri Jul 07 1995 16:42 | 4 |
|
What will you have 2nd half?
|
88.2085 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Fri Jul 07 1995 16:50 | 31 |
| >This Boston team has been *surprisingly* good this year. But therein
>lies the key question: are they this good ? It's filled with previous
>unknowns and guys who have had more stinkers than good years. Are they
>all having terrific years at once ? What will you have next year ?
I'm going off of the top of my head but let's compare what my Friday
afternoon's brain will let me compare the opening roster from last year
and right now.
This Last Advantage
C McFarlane Berryhill This
1B Vaughn Vaughn Same
2B Alicea Fletcher This
SS Valentin Valentin Same
3B Naehring Cooper This
LF Greenwell Greenwell Same
CF Tinsley Nixon Last but not by much
RF O'Leary Blosser This
DH Canseco Dawson This
I think that this years pitching is better then last year but that
isn't saying much. A rotation of Clemens,Sele, Hanson,Wakefied and
Cormier is better then Clemens, Viola, Darwin,Sele and Hesketh.
With the addition of Aguilera the bullpen is better I think.
And the bench is definatly deeper this year compared to last.
Mike
|
88.2086 | Aguilera for Rodriguez-Murray fair deal... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 10 1995 10:57 | 22 |
|
> If the despised Lou Gorman had pulled off a third of the
> moves Duquette has, he'd have been run out of town.
Sorry NAZZ, but Clueless Lou specialized in quality gaffes, not
necessarily quantity (although he scored highly in both categories).
You need about a hundred of Duquette's so-called mistakes to make
up for one Jeff Bagwell. And the Duke, unlimited bank account or
not, still will not give a player $10M when he'll settle for $2M.
No comparison.
Pay no attention to that pest Chappy. Frank Rodriguez' stock has
slipped considerably. Suppan, Garciaparra, and Trot Nixon are
rated as higher prospects, overall. Rodriguez still has value, but
the deal is more than fair. [Gorman would have made this deal, then
the Minny GM would have slyly asked for someone like Nixon as the
PTBNL, and Lou would have agreed, as an afterthought... the image of
Lou Gorman with a phone attached to his ear was a Red Sox' fan's
greatest nightmare scene...]
glenn
|
88.2087 | Would it have been a bad deal if they won ws | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Jul 10 1995 11:04 | 12 |
| The problem with Lou and the infamous deal had a lot to do with the
infighting going on between Lou and the intrenched minor league
operation. Doubtless Lou asked Kasko or whoever to give him names
starting with the 6,7,8 listed prospects in the organization with
Vaughn and Cooper for example being untouchables. Lou did have to make
a deal for a pitcher to win the division, got the correct pitcher to
get the job done (Sox did win division and wouldn't have won it without
Andersen - please don't argue this part).
The problem obviously is that Bagwell went on to superstardom and Sox
lost in semi-finals (lets simply call it that since that's what people
make it out to be these days).
|
88.2088 | Chris Donnels? Tuffy Rohodes? Cory Snyder? etc. | WORDY::NAZZARO | Bring ALexi Lalas to Boston! | Mon Jul 10 1995 11:22 | 23 |
| Please don't paint me as a Lou Gorman fan - anything but. However, can
you imagine the outcry if he tried to pawn off Chris Donnels or Tuffy
Rhodes as major league players? Between them, they are 3-54 with the
Sox!!!!! Duquette can get away with it because he has a terrific
relationship with the press, and he doesn't stick his foot in his mouth
as the perpetually confused Gorman did on a regular basis.
My point is that while Duquette has done a reasonably good job, his
trades have been less than stellar and only about half of his signees
have worked out. But since he was allowed to sign so many players, it
was logical to assume that a few would turn out to be gems.
As for the farm system getting restocked, that is a long process. I
went to Pawtucket last week and saw the Pawsox. They appeared to have
mostly retreads or has-beens on the roster. The cathcer Scott
Hatteberg and the 2B Steve Rodriguez looked like the only two legit
prospects. Which brings me to the subject of the other Rodriguez.
Last year at this time, Frankie was getting raves. Since then, the
Sox couldn't decide if he was a starter, middle reliever or a closer.
He did none of the jobs well, but got promoted anyway!!! Let's hope
they don't rush any more prospects.
NAZZ
|
88.2089 | Again, quality (Wakefield phenomenal, etc) over quantity | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Jul 10 1995 12:44 | 24 |
|
> My point is that while Duquette has done a reasonably good job, his
> trades have been less than stellar and only about half of his signees
> have worked out. But since he was allowed to sign so many players, it
> was logical to assume that a few would turn out to be gems.
I don't think it's logical at all to assume that with a purely
scattershot approach a "few" players would turn out to be gems. Probably
not even one. The Wakefield and Hanson pickups in this era of scarce
pitching amount to brilliance (if Wakefield keeps this up, he wins the
Cy Young Award; no less). Sure, a Troy O'Leary is a combination of
dumb luck and lightning in a bottle (the guy will flame out at some
point), but enough of these guys are putting in above-average or even
superior performances that the positives outweigh the negatives.
Many a GM has tried the largescale body-swap game with the result just
as likely to be a backslide as an improvement. Bottom line in this
case is that the Sox _are_ in 1st place, and _are_ playing .575
baseball at the All-Star Break without much from either Clemens or
Sele, which means that the net sum of the pickups has been more than
positive.
glenn
|
88.2090 | O'Leary for real? | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Jul 10 1995 12:49 | 9 |
| Glenn,
Your expectation of O'Leary coming back to earth is based on "How
could so many scouts, gms, baseball people be so dumb? => he must
revert to .270/10-15 homers / full season (sort of the Zupcic line).
He sure does look pretty good. And I'll put in my O'Leary for
centerfield pitch again.
Billte
|
88.2091 | AL East being so bad is real reason Boston is in first | VERBOS::NAZZARO | Bring ALexi Lalas to Boston! | Tue Jul 11 1995 11:27 | 18 |
| In today's Globe, they have a list of how many players have performed
for each AL team so far this year. Boston is way out in front - 44
players have worn the Red Sox uniform so far. Some have been awful,
like Whiten, Rhodes, and Donnels. Some have been OK, like ALicea,
Eshelman, and McFarlane. Some have been spectacular, like O'Leary,
Hanson, and Wakefield. My point is it doesn't take genius to sign a
lot of free agents and hope some will work out. What it takes is a
huge wallet. Don't you think Sal Bando in Milwaukee would have loved
to be able to do what Duquette has done?
With hardly any prospects in Pawtucket and not many more in AA, it will
be at least three years before you can judge if Duquette's rebuilding
job has been a success. By then, Wakefield, Hanson, Eshelman, etc.
will be memories, and the people Duquette is supposed to be stocking
the lower minors with now should be ready to play. That's when a more
subtantive opinion of Duquette can be accurately made.
NAZZ
|
88.2092 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Jul 11 1995 11:31 | 5 |
|
Nazz fails to mention that the title of the article is
"Hail To The Red Sox' Chief" and the gist of it is that
Duquette has done a fabulous job and gotten great value
out of his free agents many of whom were cast-offs.
|
88.2093 | Having friends in the press is a big asset | VERBOS::NAZZARO | Bring ALexi Lalas to Boston! | Tue Jul 11 1995 11:42 | 13 |
| My point exactly Tommy. Duquette has gotten great value out of a lot
of his free agents. But what the fawning press glosses over is that
his success rate overall is around 50%. Who knew O'Leary was going to
produce anywhere near what he's done, for example? But how does his
signing differ from that of Tuffy Rhodes? One turned out great, one
was a total bust. The press, in their haste to proclaim Duquette the
GM of the decade, ignore all the bad signings and praise the good ones.
Bottom line: Duquette has gotten great value out of many free agents,
and has gotten nothing out of many others. All I'm asking iss that the
press depict the entire picture.
NAZZ
|
88.2094 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Tue Jul 11 1995 12:03 | 10 |
88.2095 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Jul 11 1995 12:47 | 14 |
| >> My point exactly Tommy. Duquette has gotten great value out of a lot
>> of his free agents. But what the fawning press glosses over is that
>> his success rate overall is around 50%. Who knew O'Leary was going to
>> produce anywhere near what he's done, for example? But how does his
>> signing differ from that of Tuffy Rhodes? One turned out great, one
>> was a total bust. The press, in their haste to proclaim Duquette the
>> GM of the decade, ignore all the bad signings and praise the good ones.
There's mention of the signings that haven't panned out. And there's
also mention that Duquette scouted O'Leary when he was in high school
and leapt at the chance to sign him when the Braves waived him. Duquette
didn't fall a$$backwards into that one. His success rate may be ~50%
but the ones that have panned out have been great and have more than
made up for any missteps. The club is contending, that's the bottom line.
|
88.2096 | DD>>> LG | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Tue Jul 11 1995 12:48 | 22 |
| Nazz
Trenton has Garciaparra, Suppan, Ryan McGwire (sp) and a few more
pitchers who are top prospects although most of the prospects like
Coleman,Nixon and others are at A ball. Malaave, Murry and maybe
Hatteburg are the only prospects in Pawtucket. While DD has signed many
Free Agents most of them have either speed and/or power which he hopes
develop. This is the major differance between Lou and DD. Duquette
tries and find players who have some power or speed potential and then
have their coaches develop them. Lou just went for known players.
Because of the lack of talent inherited Duquette has had to sign a lot
of Free Agents. Very few of them have been for more then the minimum
and he has not once overpaid for one (Unlike Lou). And with most of the
signings being for one year, players have to play hard for the next
contract.
I don't think many of his signings were for players that he saw
as starters. There is a hell of a lot more talent in the organization
today then there was on the day he signed in.
Oh yeah would Lou have been alert enough to get a #1 pick for the Reds
signing of Damon Berryhill?
Mike
|
88.2097 | Duquette is working smarter, not spending frivolously | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Jul 11 1995 12:49 | 38 |
|
> -< AL East being so bad is real reason Boston is in first >-
Nope. It's the reason they're as far out in front (at least w.r.t.
Baltimore, New York) as they are, but the Sox have the second-best
record in the AL, period. That likely won't hold up all the way,
but it's a very good record nonetheless (93 wins projected in
a normal 162-game season).
> My point is it doesn't take genius to sign a
> lot of free agents and hope some will work out. What it takes is a
> huge wallet.
That's just not the case. All of the players you have mentioned
were had virtually for a song. Anyone could have had Tim Wakefield
for a bit more than the beer money Duquette paid. Hanson was the
budget-buster at around a whopping $1M. You could have made this
argument with the guys that Duquette ultimately _lost_ when the free
agent rules reverted back (Wetteland, Appier, Sosa), but the low-budget
alternative Plan B has been a great success (so far).
> With hardly any prospects in Pawtucket and not many more in AA, it will
> be at least three years before you can judge if Duquette's rebuilding
> job has been a success. By then, Wakefield, Hanson, Eshelman, etc.
> will be memories, and the people Duquette is supposed to be stocking
> the lower minors with now should be ready to play. That's when a more
> subtantive opinion of Duquette can be accurately made.
I agree with this. But Duquette is also getting it done with what
he has to work with _now_. That was another thing about Lou Gorman;
apart from the disastrous exception to the rule like Bagwell, Lou was
generally a "stand pat" GM during the season even when things were
coming down around him (some would say that this was a mixed blessing
as Lou did miss out on the opportunity to deal Vaughn, Valentin,
Naehring, etc., in spite of many rumors to the same).
glenn
|
88.2098 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove! | Tue Jul 11 1995 12:50 | 8 |
|
>> I guess there's nothing better to do in Boston than bash one
>> of the best GMs in the game. Boston was dying to snatch this
>> guy up, and now some (not all) fans are on his case.
This is Boston not bandwagon-jumping Cleveland where the total
attendance for the '80s wouldn't equal an off year in Boston.
Dissecting the Sox is the local pasttime.
|
88.2099 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Jul 11 1995 12:55 | 9 |
| Again you are susbstituting Gorman for the whole Redsox organization.
Gorman never had total power and certainly not total communication.
If this were the world Gorman lived in then Suppan would have gone to
Minn.
If there was a guy to epitomize for Sox failure it is Haywood Sullivan
for me. But I do agree that given the mandate, DD is going whole hog.
|
88.2100 | Sox are lucky they didn't get Wetteland | VERBOS::NAZZARO | RIP Andrea 1/18/85 - 7-21/94 | Tue Jul 11 1995 14:01 | 12 |
| The best thing that Duquette has done is to avoid the big name
signings, even though he could have. What I don't know is whether this
was by design or because the big names he tried to bring in (like
Wetteland) got detoured. In any event, signing six free agents for
short money and having three work out is far better than signing one or
two big name free agents and seeing them fail miserably (hello Jack
Clark and several other Lou Gortman mistakes).
It is to Duquette's credit that he did have a Plan B to fall back on,
and that so far it's worked.
NAZZ
|
88.2101 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Tue Jul 11 1995 14:23 | 7 |
|
The other thing I like about DD. Is that he seems to have good
two way communication with KK. He doesn't just sign players and dump
them on KK. Its more of a KK what do want/need, here is what I can get.
Or KK here is what I got, do you want them or do they go to Pawtucket.
Ron
|
88.2102 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Tue Jul 11 1995 14:54 | 7 |
88.2103 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Jul 11 1995 14:59 | 21 |
| > Malaave, Murry and maybe Hatteburg are the only prospects in Pawtucket.
I was at Pawtucket 2 weeks ago and I'm not sure Malaave is a legit
prospect. He plays in the OF, has a paunchy gut, and runs with the
proverbial "piano on his back".
Murray is their lone AAA all-star, but unfortunately he didn't play
that night. No one else stuck out as a "prospect". I go every year
and have seen Mo, Plantier, Valentin, etc...all of which had "obvious"
talent.
I think Duquette's moves have paid off and give him a very good grade
for 1995. It'll be interesting to see if these previous unknowns are
one-year-wonders.
Seeing Donnels called a disappointment brings a smile to this Yankee
fan's face. I remember the rumors that the Yanks were going to trade
Pat Kelly for Donnels. As is the case most of the time, this was one
of those "best trade that was never made", as Kelly has established
himself as an exceptional 2B and hits in the .280-range.
|
88.2104 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Jul 11 1995 15:15 | 20 |
|
Jose Malave is a very marginal "prospect". I think he's about 36
years old by now (naw, maybe 24, as with Murray). Hopefully of the
Malave/Murray duo it'll be Malave that goes to the Twins as the
PTBNL, but neither of these guys are going to amount to a whole
lot more than serviceable, average-hitting OFs at best. It's
definitely true that the Sox' supposed minor-league "strength" is
a longterm projection based on the last few amateur drafts (the
Nixon/Suppan draft coming on Gorman's final watch, FWIW), in the
mid-lower minors.
Sure, someone like Chris Donnels has been a "disappointment", but
he's a utility infielder with 27 ABs, fercryinoutloud. Likewise
Tuffy Rhodes has 25 ABs. Meanwhile, Troy O'Leary is hitting .345
with an excellent .570 SLG over *200* ABs. Which is why you can't
just look at three players like these and say that there's been a
67% failure rate and expect it to mean anything...
glenn
|
88.2105 | Not many prospects in Pawtucket | ILBBAK::SILVESTRI | I have no answers | Tue Jul 11 1995 15:17 | 19 |
| Re. Red Sox Farm System and prospects
Was in Rhode Island this past weekend reading the Providence
Journal Bulletin ... while the national coverage is less than
spectacular, they do a great job on the PawSox and the rest of
the Red Sox farm system (in addition to superb coverage of
college basketball - with the PC Friars in the Big East and
the URI Rams in the Atlantic 10) ... anyway, there was one big
article about the "new minor league structure" ... they claimed
that Triple AAA baseball is now treated as a money maker and is
no longer used for player development, that the "real" prospects
are kept at Double AA and Single A ball in order to develop ...
and looking at the Red Sox, they sure fit that bill ... the PawSox
have very few (if any) oustanding prospects playing for them,
they are made up mostly of career minor leaguers and players who
bounce back and forth from the majors to the minors ... most of
the Red Sox future is playing at Trenton or lower ...
Vinny
|
88.2106 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Jul 11 1995 16:11 | 9 |
| > article about the "new minor league structure" ... they claimed
> that Triple AAA baseball is now treated as a money maker and is
> no longer used for player development, that the "real" prospects
> are kept at Double AA and Single A ball in order to develop ...
The Yanks system could possibly be described this way too. Jeter is "the
prospect" at Columbus (AAA), with the outside chance of a Posada (C) or
Leach (OF). Norwich has Ruben Rivera (ie: "the next savior"), and a
few other young, good-looking "prospects".
|
88.2107 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | Never ruin good vodka with a dairy product... | Tue Jul 11 1995 16:14 | 3 |
| >Norwich has Ruben Rivera (ie: "the next savior")
Are the rivers there running red with blood, or anything like that?
|
88.2108 | I thought he was 23 | CSLALL::BRULE | Was there life before ESPN? | Tue Jul 11 1995 16:57 | 9 |
| > Malaave, Murry and maybe Hatteburg are the only prospects in Pawtucket.
Malaave was one of the top hitters in AA ball last year. Didn't he
bat well over .300 last year in AA? He is starting to hit in Pawtucket
after a very slow start. He was listed as one of the Sox top prospects
by Baseball America.
Mike
|
88.2109 | Malave - maybe; Hatteberg - yes | WORDY::NAZZARO | RIP Andrea 1/18/85 - 7-21/94 | Wed Jul 12 1995 10:36 | 4 |
| Malave is so bad in the field they are forced to play him at DH.
Hatteberg looks like the real deal at catcher, though.
NAZZ
|
88.2110 | | PSDVAX::ROBICHAUD | Do You Believe Now! | Wed Jul 12 1995 13:59 | 8 |
| Speaking of Pautuckett, I was down there on the weekend of the 4th
and was surprised to see how many locals with a car length or more of land
were actually charging patrons to park. To the PawSox credit they still
let you park on their land for free, and I know enough places down there
where I can still park sans fee, but this minor league greed fever has
definitely taken over the PawSox's neighbors.
/Don
|
88.2111 | | SALEM::DODA | Twitchin' like a finger on the trigger of a gun | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:04 | 5 |
| There were people up in Loudon charging $25 to park on their
property for the race last weekend. One guy said he made $2-3K
over the weekend....
daryll
|
88.2112 | | PSDVAX::ROBICHAUD | Do You Believe Now! | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:10 | 5 |
| This is my fifth year of doing the PawSox games and this is the
first time I've seen the pay to park frenzy. The only minor league
park I've been to that charges was Norwich.
/Don
|
88.2113 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Jul 24 1995 11:08 | 9 |
| Hey Glenn, good thing Doc Pappas came up with this "inflamed elbow" thing
to explain why Rog is getting pounded, otherwise The Faithful might realize
what the rest of us "outsiders" have known for a few years now: That Roger
ain't what he used to be.
It happened to us with Mattingly, and the sooner you boys accept that he's
just a good ML pitcher now, the easier it'll be on ya. He had a great
stretch ('86-90 ?), and now if he can just be a good pitcher for another
few years, he should be a lock for the HoF.
|
88.2114 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Watch out Big Brother's watching! | Mon Jul 24 1995 13:01 | 5 |
|
didn't he originally hurt it laying carpet? I suppose it's better
than his I was squeezed excuse..........
mike
|
88.2115 | ex | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill! | Mon Jul 24 1995 13:10 | 4 |
|
So, if the Rocket can't right himself and puts together
a few more seasons like this one, does he still make the
HoF?
|
88.2116 | or are you tryin to get someones goat | AD::HEATH | Tribe Rooools Sox Suck (again by the way) | Mon Jul 24 1995 13:51 | 3 |
|
Nope
|
88.2117 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Jul 24 1995 13:59 | 17 |
| After his win last weekend the Globe said that his speed was really off. They
said he use to throw a number of pitches in the mid 90's and a few up around 97
or 98 but now he only throws a couple as fast as 87 mph with most in the low to
mid 80s.
Al Niper felt his speed would pick up as the season went on and that he was
still basically at the end of spring training. I wouldn't send him packing yet.
With his past and the fact that he started late it's worth hanging in there to
see if he comes around.
After the game he said he had some swelling in his arm and that Doc Pappas
was going to look him over. There was talk of an MRI.
As for the HOF, unless someone breaks his record of 20 strikeouts in a game
before he becomes eligible I'd say yes. That's one impressive record.
George
|
88.2118 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Mon Jul 24 1995 14:54 | 8 |
|
Rogers career record is 175-96 after 10.5 seasons. Which is a
.548 winning percentage. So at the end of this year his average
year will be 16-9. If Roger gets 200 wins for his career he will
make the HOF. On the basis of winning percentage, 2 Cy young awards,
being a dominant pitcher during his time, the 20 strikeout game.
Ron
|
88.2119 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill! | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:34 | 9 |
|
>> -< or are you tryin to get someones goat >-
Nope. Honest question. A week or two ago, Sean McDonough said that
you could write-off one offyear for Roger but now it's time to
face the fact that now he's "just another pitcher". I honestly wonder
if he puts together another year or two like this one and is let
go or retires afterward, does he get in on the strength of the
great years that he's had in the past?
|
88.2120 | Sox game on August 10? | HOTLNE::RLAMONT | | Mon Jul 24 1995 17:02 | 11 |
| I have a scheduling question. A friend of mine has a copy out of a
recent Globe showing games the Red Sox are selling tickets to at a
discount. One of the games is scheduled for Thursday, August 10. My
schedule, and the schedule on the espn net address, does not show a
game being played that night.
Could anyone enlighten me as to whether or not there is a game that
night? Or, could someone give me the number to the Box Office???
Thanks very much!
Rick Lamont
|
88.2121 | | SALEM::DODA | No Alibis:Don'tGoThruLifeTryingToJustify | Thu Jul 27 1995 14:27 | 1 |
| Aug 10 is a reschedule of a rainout with Baltimore from May.
|
88.2122 | Could go down to the wire | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944 | Mon Jul 31 1995 07:10 | 6 |
| Yanks acquire Cone, O's get Bonilla. The AL East just got a lot tighter.
In passing, if I'm Baltimore, I hate to give up Alex Ochoa for a long shot
at the division.
Steve
|
88.2123 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Jul 31 1995 10:57 | 14 |
| >In passing, if I'm Baltimore, I hate to give up Alex Ochoa for a long shot
>at the division.
Yeah, but Angelos sounds like that "type" of owner. Impatient, thinks
he knows more than his baseball people. Glad to see there's another one
in the AL East.
It'll be interesting watching this kid's progress. His minor league
manager reported to the GM that he's another year away from the majors.
And the one knock on him is his hitting (.280 at AAA)....not much power.
Between now and midnight we'll find out how committed Duquette is to
rebuilding the farm system. Balt and NY are definitely stronger, and
they were already playing better baseball too.
|
88.2124 | He's already gone for Aggie | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944 | Mon Jul 31 1995 12:06 | 5 |
| The commitment to the farm system is usually not the first priority when a
team has a shot at winning it all. If I could get a Bret Saberhagen, I'd
go for it, and let the future take care of itself.
Steve
|
88.2125 | Subject to change tomorrow | AD::HEATH | Tribe Rooools Sox Suck (again by the way) | Mon Jul 31 1995 12:45 | 12 |
|
But Steve, they can't win it all this year. They have had a great
run and I've enjoyed it all summer long. In a 7 game series -vs- the
Indians or Angels we are toast. The Halo's are scoring almost 8 runs
a game over the last month, the Sox just can't hang with that. Getting
a front line pitcher would be nice but to give up any of the Suppan,
Nomar, the lefty at Trenton can't think of his name is not a good move
at this point. I we can get Saberhagen for a Malave, Ryan and say
Naerhing I'd do it. But no real front line prospects.
Jerry
|
88.2126 | Mets will have to deal at the end | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Jul 31 1995 13:11 | 3 |
| I think when it comes down to the final minutes the mets will take a
deal. Why should they pay Saberhagen all that money when they're not
in the chase for a few more years.
|
88.2127 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Jul 31 1995 16:20 | 9 |
| I agree with the note a couple back, the Red Sox have been walking on water
making chicken salad out of chicken feathers. This team is suppose to be
somewhere around 4th in the division, not in 1st place.
The chance of this team winning is slim. It's fun to cheer them on but I'd
rather they build a solid base for the future rather than hoping for a low
probability miracle finish.
George
|
88.2128 | | SUBPAC::SKALSKI | | Mon Jul 31 1995 19:07 | 10 |
|
It's still 6 hours from midnight but word on the streets
is Saberhagen was/is being delt to an AL East team. Hmmmmm wonder
who that might be. He's carrying some hefty baggage money wise,
from the Mets and KC I believe. More details will follow.
Shark
|
88.2129 | rebuilding year 78 starts next year | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Tue Aug 01 1995 08:25 | 3 |
88.2130 | 787 pages down, only 366 pages to go | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Tue Aug 01 1995 08:57 | 6 |
|
It happened right after the Captain Tripps' plaque Paul.....
;^)
mike
|
88.2131 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Tue Aug 01 1995 09:13 | 4 |
88.2132 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Aug 01 1995 09:21 | 8 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2131 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI "The dream is always the same" >>>
> Sox started rebuilding process by selling Babe Ruth. They're still
> waiting for the benefits of the $100,000 they received.
Depends, was No-No-Nannett a success or a flop?
George
|
88.2133 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Tue Aug 01 1995 10:04 | 4 |
|
Met's brass claim the sox were out of it at 3:00 yesterday.....they had
to settle for Mike Stanton.......
|
88.2134 | PTBNL? | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Reasonable summer rates | Tue Aug 01 1995 10:05 | 6 |
| So who's gonna be the Player To be Named Later for the Sox? If Stanton
comes around he can be a good one (Had 27 saves by July 31 in 1993).
He's been in the tank recently though.
UMDan
|
88.2135 | No,no George | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Aug 01 1995 11:12 | 7 |
| NoNo Nanette was pretty successful but by the time it was a success on
Broadway ( > 1923) Ruth was already a big star. Didn't the Gershwin
bros do the score for that one?
And I believe Ruth's sale was not specifically for nnn, but rather some
of the others traded, eg pitchers. Joe Dugan was part of that New
Haven railroad express.
|
88.2136 | Cone > Stanton | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | the Halfway House Ruth Built... | Tue Aug 01 1995 12:53 | 1 |
|
|
88.2137 | The Stankees will self destruct | AD::HEATH | New England Patriots 1996 Super Bowl Champs | Tue Aug 01 1995 12:55 | 5 |
|
Yea your probably right but look at the standings today.
Jerry
|
88.2138 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Tue Aug 01 1995 13:56 | 5 |
|
Some facts heard on the radio.....
Stanton had one 1-2-3 inning in the past month.....
He went a year between saves.....
|
88.2139 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Tue Aug 01 1995 14:02 | 4 |
| > Stanton had one 1-2-3 inning in the past month.....
> He went a year between saves.....
The new Ken Ryan!!!
|
88.2140 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Aug 01 1995 14:11 | 12 |
|
> Stanton had one 1-2-3 inning in the past month.....
In how many appearances?
> He went a year between saves.....
This is clearly a bogus "stat". He's not appearing in save situations,
therefore he's not getting saves. Has absolutely nothing to do with
his abilities.
Joe
|
88.2141 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Aug 01 1995 14:28 | 19 |
| > This is clearly a bogus "stat". He's not appearing in save situations,
> therefore he's not getting saves. Has absolutely nothing to do with
> his abilities.
You're right. His abilities have produced a 5.+ ERA. Probably an excuse
for that too.
re: look at the standings today
While it's true that Boston is currently up 4 games in the loss column,
it's also true that they WERE 9 games up (on the Yanks) a month or so ago
and have played sub-.500 ball since that time. Clearly Boston has been
scrambling to keep their heads above water. Injuries and players coming
back to earth have been dominant. NY, on the other hand, has regrouped
from a horrible May-June, and looks more stable and is playing better ball.
BUT, they now have to play 5 games better than Boston and one game better
than Balt from this point to the end.
|
88.2142 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Tue Aug 01 1995 14:40 | 14 |
|
You can argue all of the acquisitions one way or another. You
can look at the Cone deal and say. Cone is 5-6 and the Blue Jays are
in last place. So he didn't help them much, will he help the Yankees.
I think the Sox have enough pitching and flexibility in the staff.
They have 8 people who have started, Clemens, Sele, Wakefield, Hanson,
Smith, Cormier, Eshelman, and Suppan. They should be able to find 5
starters. The big key is how much does Bonilla and Sierra produce?
I'll bet that Jose Canseco gets on a roll and out produces them. From
this point on in the season. Sierra should produce more then Bonilla.
Say what you want to say, when you switch leagues in the middle of the
season. It is hard to adjust to the pitching differences.
Ron
|
88.2143 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Aug 01 1995 14:47 | 20 |
|
>> This is clearly a bogus "stat". He's not appearing in save situations,
>> therefore he's not getting saves. Has absolutely nothing to do with
>> his abilities.
>You're right. His abilities have produced a 5.+ ERA. Probably an excuse
>for that too.
I'm _not_ making excuses - I'm just pointing out that at least one
of the item mentioned as being negative about Stanton is, in fact,
irrelevant.
The 5+ ERA certainly isn't good; the 31 hits in under 20 innings
is clearly bad, though the 13/6 K/BB ratio is at least vaguely
encouraging. Stanton's not so old (28) as to be clearly washed up;
his best seasons (91 & 94, though 92 wasn't bad) aren't too far
in the past, either. He's a reasonable pick up provided (1) he's
not expensive, and (2) your scouts see something they like in him.
Joe
|
88.2144 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Aug 01 1995 15:02 | 34 |
|
> The big key is how much does Bonilla and Sierra produce?
> I'll bet that Jose Canseco gets on a roll and out produces them.
OK, this would make sense - Canseco's been the best of the three
every year the past five years save 1993.
> From this point on in the season. Sierra should produce more then Bonilla.
Why?
> Say what you want to say, when you switch leagues in the middle of the
> season. It is hard to adjust to the pitching differences.
Ah - I see - learning the pitchers. Maybe. That's about the _only_
reason to expect Sierra to be more productive, though - because in
every single year from 1990-1994, Bonilla's been move productive,
sometimes by quite a bit. This year, it's not even close (to
Sierra's credit, he was close in 91 & 92; never has the difference
been so prominent as this year, though).
Just for the fun of it - normalized to a 1992 AL neutral park,
the most comparable offensive seasons this year:
Bonilla - Tim Salmon, Albert Belle, Ron Gant, Jeff Conine, Craig
Biggio
Sierra - Mike Greenwell, Jeff Branson, Eddie Williams, Brian
Williams, Orlando Merced
Just a slight difference, there...
Joe
|
88.2145 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Tue Aug 01 1995 15:20 | 12 |
88.2146 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Aug 01 1995 18:02 | 4 |
| > The question is, if Sele and Clemens come back strong by the
> middle-end of August, can the Yankees/Orioles catch them?
Will Boston be ahead ?
|
88.2147 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Aug 01 1995 18:04 | 12 |
| > Bonilla - Tim Salmon, Albert Belle, Ron Gant, Jeff Conine, Craig
> Biggio
>
> Sierra - Mike Greenwell, Jeff Branson, Eddie Williams, Brian
> Williams, Orlando Merced
>
> Just a slight difference, there...
I don't have numbers, but I did hear (at the time of the trade) that
only Cecil Fielder had more RBI in all of MLB the last 5 years than
Ruben Sierra. A significant stat, don't you think Joe ?
|
88.2148 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The dream is always the same | Tue Aug 01 1995 21:11 | 3 |
88.2149 | Mike and the Rabid dog are dopes | AD::HEATH | New England Patriots 1996 Super Bowl Champs | Wed Aug 02 1995 08:20 | 10 |
|
> I don't have numbers, but I did hear (at the time of the trade) that
> only Cecil Fielder had more RBI in all of MLB the last 5 years than
> Ruben Sierra. A significant stat, don't you think Joe ?
You've been listen to FAN to long if you really believe this.
Jerry
|
88.2150 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Aug 02 1995 09:12 | 36 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2147 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>
>I don't have numbers, but I did hear (at the time of the trade) that
>only Cecil Fielder had more RBI in all of MLB the last 5 years than
>Ruben Sierra. A significant stat, don't you think Joe ?
RBI's are something of an indicator but they are not that great since they
depend a lot on how many runners are on base when a batter comes to bat. For
example, someone who was hitting behind Rickie Henderson for the last 5 years
is probably going to get more RBI's than someone else.
A better stat would be something like Bill James Runs Created formula which
predicts the number of runs a hitter has added to his team. It's better because
it only considers things that the batter independent of other hitters. Using
that Ruben Sierra has 36.989 Runs Created this season in 252 at bats compared
to 48.155 for Fielder in 272 at bats.
Danny Tartabull by comparison only has 24.768 Runs Created but he has only
191 at bats. By comparison, up around the top of the list Frank Thomas has 89.5
Runs Created.
Another interesting stat is runs created per game which predicts the number
of runs a player would generate in a game if he were able to bat every time
himself. Runs created per game (and some other stats) for the guys mentioned
are as follows (with Mo thrown in because I'm a fan :*)}).
Runs RC per Total
Created Game Avr AB H HR Bases BB SO
------- ------ --- -- - -- ----- -- --
Frank Thomas 89.506 13.063 .328 274 90 25 183 85 39
Mo Vaughn 71.711 9.176 .299 298 89 26 179 44 88
Cecil Fielder 48.155 6.342 .250 272 68 20 136 46 54
Ruben Sierra 36.989 5.256 .262 252 66 12 118 23 39
Danny Tartabull 24.768 4.518 .225 191 43 6 73 33 53
George
|
88.2151 | Ruben's stats... | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Wed Aug 02 1995 10:08 | 229 |
|
Ruben Sierra
Oakland Athletics
Right Field
Height: 6-1
Weight: 200
Born: October 6, 1965 in Rio Piedras, P.R.
College: None
Drafted: was not drafted
Acquired: Traded by Texas with pitchers Bobby Witt and Jeff Russell and cash
to Oakland for outfielder
Jose Canseco Aug. 31, 1992...re-signed as a free agent, December 23, 1992
MLB Seasons: 10
Career Batting Statistics
Seasonal Averages (per 162 Games Played)
1995 Splits
Fielding Statistics
Career Highlights
Career Batting Statistics
-Percentages-
Yr Tm G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB CS OBP SLG AVG
1986 Tex 113 382 50 101 13 10 16 55 22 65 7 8 .302 .476 .264
1987 Tex 158 643 97 169 35 4 30 109 39 114 16 11 .302 .470 .263
1988 Tex 156 615 77 156 32 2 23 91 44 91 18 4 .301 .424 .254
1989 Tex 162 634 101 194 35 14 29 119 43 82 8 2 .347 .543 .306
1990 Tex 159 608 70 170 37 2 16 96 49 86 9 0 .330 .426 .280
1991 Tex 161 661 110 203 44 5 25 116 56 91 16 4 .357 .502 .307
1992 Oak 27 101 17 28 4 1 3 17 14 9 2 0 .359 .426 .277
.... Tex 124 500 66 139 30 6 14 70 31 59 12 4 .315 .446 .278
..Season 151 601 83 167 34 7 17 87 45 68 14 4 .323 .443 .278
1993 Oak 158 630 77 147 23 5 22 101 52 97 25 5 .288 .390 .233
1994 Oak 110 426 71 114 21 1 23 92 23 64 8 5 .298 .484 .268
1995 Oak 70 264 40 70 17 0 12 42 24 42 4 4 .323 .466 .265
Totals 1398 5464 776 1491 291 50 213 908 397 800 125 47 .318 .461 .273
Return to top
Seasonal Averages (per 162 Games Played)
-Percentages-
Years G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB CS OBP SLG AVG
8.62 162 633 89 172 33 5 24 105 46 92 14 5 .318 .461 .273
Return to top
1995 Splits
-Percentages-
G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB--I SO SB CS GDP OBP SLG AVG
Total 70 264 40 70 17 0 12 42 24 2 42 4 4 2 .323 .466 .265
vs. Left 36 81 11 24 4 0 2 12 9 0 8 1 3 0 .363 .420 .296
vs. Right 64 183 29 46 13 0 10 30 15 2 34 3 1 2 .305 .486 .251
Home 33 114 16 24 4 0 3 11 10 1 16 2 2 0 .272 .325 .211
Away 37 150 24 46 13 0 9 31 14 1 26 2 2 2 .361 .573 .307
None on 69 147 7 40 12 0 7 7 12 0 21 0 0 0 .327 .497 .272
Runners on 63 117 33 30 5 0 5 35 12 2 21 4 4 2 .318 .427 .256
April 5 19 2 3 1 0 1 3 1 0 5 0 0 0 .190 .368 .158
May 27 99 18 28 6 0 5 16 8 0 15 3 0 0 .330 .495 .283
June 28 112 18 31 9 0 6 21 12 2 16 1 3 1 .347 .518 .277
July 10 34 2 8 1 0 0 2 3 0 6 0 1 1 .297 .265 .235
None on/out 51 64 1 18 7 0 1 1 2 0 7 0 0 0 .303 .438 .281
Scoring Posn 54 64 26 17 4 0 1 27 8 2 14 0 0 0 .333 .375 .266
Close & Late 33 40 10 10 2 0 1 5 4 1 10 2 0 0 .311 .375 .250
Bases Loaded 15 9 5 3 0 0 0 7 1 0 3 0 0 0 .364 .333 .333
Batting #1 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 .500 .500 .500
Batting #3 31 124 17 30 10 0 3 18 12 1 18 1 3 1 .309 .395 .242
Batting #4 8 32 4 7 0 0 3 6 1 0 6 0 1 0 .235 .500 .219
Batting #5 28 104 18 31 7 0 6 18 11 1 17 2 0 1 .359 .538 .298
Batting #7 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000
Batting #8 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.00 1.00 1.00
G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB--I SO SB CS GDP OBP SLG AVG
As rf 62 232 36 63 15 0 10 38 21 1 36 4 4 2 .328 .466 .272
As dh (not ph 7 29 4 6 2 0 2 4 3 1 5 0 0 0 .281 .483 .207
As ph (not dh 3 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 .333 .333 .333
0-0 count 50 44 40 13 1 0 2 7 1 1 0 1 0 0 .311 .455 .295
After (0-1) 64 117 0 28 9 0 2 12 3 0 27 1 1 0 .256 .368 .239
After (1-0) 60 103 0 29 7 0 8 23 20 1 15 2 3 2 .392 .583 .282
0-2 Count 16 18 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 .111 .111 .111
Grass 62 231 33 62 15 0 9 36 20 1 35 3 4 2 .323 .450 .268
Turf 8 33 7 8 2 0 3 6 4 1 7 1 0 0 .324 .576 .242
Day 28 100 16 28 7 0 3 18 11 1 15 1 1 0 .348 .440 .280
Night 42 164 24 42 10 0 9 24 13 1 27 3 3 2 .307 .482 .256
Inning 1-6 67 176 24 44 8 0 11 31 18 1 24 1 4 0 .316 .483 .250
Inning 7+ 66 88 16 26 9 0 1 11 6 1 18 3 0 2 .337 .432 .295
vs.Bal 6 22 4 7 2 0 1 5 2 0 2 0 1 0 .360 .545 .318
vs.Bos 6 22 3 6 2 0 0 3 0 0 4 1 0 0 .273 .364 .273
vs.Cal 6 24 1 5 3 0 0 4 2 0 7 0 0 0 .269 .333 .208
vs.ChA 6 20 4 6 2 0 2 4 5 0 2 0 1 0 .440 .700 .300
vs.Cle 2 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 .250 .143 .143
vs.Det 3 12 0 4 1 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 1 .385 .417 .333
vs.KC 7 29 4 10 1 0 0 6 1 0 3 0 0 0 .355 .379 .345
vs.Mil 6 21 3 5 1 0 1 3 1 0 4 0 1 0 .261 .429 .238
vs.Min 6 25 5 4 0 0 2 5 4 1 3 1 0 0 .276 .400 .160
vs.NYA 7 26 8 10 1 0 4 8 3 0 2 1 1 0 .448 .885 .385
vs.Sea 6 23 4 8 2 0 2 2 1 1 4 1 0 0 .375 .696 .348
vs.Tex 7 27 3 4 2 0 0 2 2 0 5 0 0 1 .207 .222 .148
vs.Tor 2 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 .143 .000 .000
Pre-All Star 65 245 39 65 16 0 12 42 22 2 38 4 4 1 .322 .478 .265
Post-All Star 5 19 1 5 1 0 0 0 2 0 4 0 0 1 .333 .316 .263
G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB--I SO SB CS GDP OBP SLG AVG
Totals 70 264 40 70 17 0 12 42 24 2 42 4 4 2 .323 .466 .265
Miscellaneous #Pit #P/PA GB FB G/F IBB SH SF HBP
1043 3.95 88 97 .91 2 0 3 0
Return to top
Fielding Statistics
Zone
Position G GS INN PO A E DP FPCT RF CHA OUT Rating
Right Field 62 60 500.0 89 1 4 0 .957 1.62 94 89 .200
Return to top
Career Highlights
1994: Paced the Athletics in home runs (23) and RBI (92) and tied for the club
lead in hits (114) ... Was on pace
for a club record and personal-best 130 RBI before the season ended ... His RBI
total was sixth-best in the AL
... For the fourth time in his career, he homered from both sides of the plate
in a game on June 8 against
Milwaukee, becoming only the second player in franchise history to do ... Became
only the eighth swith-hitter in
major league history to reach the 200 home run plateau on July 29 at Detroit ...
Selected to represent the A's in
the All-Star Game ... It was his second straight and fourth All-Star appearance.
1993: He collected 101 RBI in his first full season with Oakland, the fourth
time in his career he reached the
century mark in RBI ... Finished third in the American League with 630 at-bats
... Paced the A's in runs (77),
homers (22), RBI (101) and extra-base hits (50) ... Gunned down nine runners
from the outfield to lead the club
in assists ... Almost half of his home run total (9-of-22) were three-run shots
... His 150 games marked the
seventh straight season he tallied 150-plus games played. ... Hit .147 over his
final 50 games.
1992: Hit safely in 18 of his 27 games following his trade from Texas to Oakland
... Homered off David Cone in
Game 5 of the AL Championship Series against Toronto ... Finished with a .333
average with seven RBI in six
games during the AL Championship Series.
1991: Finished third in the AL with 116 RBI, 443 total bases, and 44 doubles ...
Appeared in his second
All-Star Game ... Became Texas' all-time RBI leader ... Batted .307 in 161 games
... Notched hits in
18-straight games from June 12 to June 30 ... Posted his third 100-plus RBI
season ... Compiled three five RBI
games during the year.
1990: Paced the Rangers in games (159), at-bats (608), doubles (37) and RBI (96)
... Tied for fourth in the
league in intentional free passes ... His 96 RBI ranked fifth in the AL ...
Collected extra-base hits in eight
straight games (June 27-July 5) to set a club record.
1989: His 14 triples led all big league players ... Topped the AL with 119 RBI,
344 total bases, a .543 slugging
percentage and 78 extra-base hits ... Started every game during the season ...
Hit .377 with seven homers and
25 RBI in June to earn AL Player of the Month honors ... Named AL Player of the
Year by The Sporting News
and USA Today ... Finished runner-up in the Most Valuable Player voting by the
Baseball Writers Association
of America.
1988: Led Texas in runs (77), hits (156), extra-base hits (57), total bases
(261), doubles (32), homers (23),
RBI (91) and slugging percentage (.426) ... Batted .254 ... Earned his second
consecutive Rangers Player of the
Year Award.
1987: Paced the Rangers in runs (97), total bases (302), extra-base hits (69),
doubles (35) and RBI (109) ...
Became only the sixth player in big league history to reach both 30 homers and
100 RBI prior to his 22 birthday
... Became the first Ranger to hit two inside the park homers in one season ...
Earned the club's Player of the
Year Award.
1986: Received a call-up to Texas June 1, after beginning the year with Oklahoma
City of the Class AAA
American Association ... Hit 16 homers with 55 RBI in only 113 games for Texas
... Tallied 41 RBI in 46 games
for Oklahoma City before his promotion.
Return to top
|
88.2152 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Aug 02 1995 10:10 | 32 |
|
>I don't have numbers, but I did hear (at the time of the trade) that
>only Cecil Fielder had more RBI in all of MLB the last 5 years than
>Ruben Sierra. A significant stat, don't you think Joe ?
Yes indeed - it shows how good the Oakland & Texas batters coming
up before Sierra were.
RBI are _almost_ completely meaningless. The _only_ way they can
have meaning is if a player consistently hits significantly better
in PBI situations; in practice, this doesn't happen.
BTW - the comparisons I posted (repeated below) are based upon
only this year's numbers, and are done using equivalent averages
and equivalent runs. Equivalent runs are similar to runs
created, but slightly more accurate. Equivalent average is
a batting-average like statistic to messure how well a player
creates runs (well, equivalent runs) in his opportunities.
.265 is the league average by definition; .300 EqA is about
as common as a .300 BA, and represents a very good player.
League leading EqA are typically aroung .350. FWIW, the
current league leaders in EqA are Franks Thomas (.367) and
Edgar Martinez (.364) in the AL; Barry Bonds (.344) and
Reggie Sanders (.332) in the NL.
Joe
> Bonilla - Tim Salmon, Albert Belle, Ron Gant, Jeff Conine, Craig
> Biggio
>
> Sierra - Mike Greenwell, Jeff Branson, Eddie Williams, Brian
> Williams, Orlando Merced
|
88.2153 | Yankees _should_ win, no excuses... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 02 1995 10:59 | 18 |
|
Like Jack McDowell is to pitching, Ruben Sierra is to hitting.
That is, one of the most overrated in baseball. I can hear the
Yankee fans screaming now, but I'll wager that Mr. Huber will back
me up on this. Sierra is also quite possibly the biggest cancer in
all of baseball-- much more so even than Tartabull which is no mean
feat. In spite of his mouth, I don't recall Tartabull being accused
of not even _trying_, a charge that has been repeatedly levelled at
Sierra, by his own teammates and managers.
By all appearances the David Cone trade was a steal, though. We'll
just have to see if it's enough. The Sox just have to keep marking
those days off the calendar, one by one, without collapsing. Tim
Wakefield maintaing his role as the Cy Young stopper is paramount.
Avoid that big losing streak and there's hope...
glenn
|
88.2154 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | the Halfway House Ruth Built... | Wed Aug 02 1995 11:11 | 16 |
|
Newsflash....
Glen Wagamain badmouths 2 yankees news at 11!!
Bases loaded 2 out who would you rather have up? Sierra, or 1 of
these 3 Greenwell, Tinsley, O'Leary.
Oh wait a minute. Red Sox fans will now say that O'Leary is
batting .330 plus so they'd want him up. Lord knows he has put his time
in!
Say what you want guys.
HEAR THE FOOTSTEPS THEY ARE REAL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
|
88.2155 | | CAMONE::WAY | Software Mortician | Wed Aug 02 1995 11:17 | 11 |
| Chappy,
Calm yourself. It's too hot to get so excited. You'll get heat stroke
or something.
It's August. We ALL know what happens in August.
Calm yourself.
'Saw
|
88.2156 | Let's watch the Yankees disintegrate | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Aug 02 1995 12:02 | 8 |
| Well Buck and Stick worked for a few years to put together a hard
driving, intense, doitright or getout type of team and now Myshky is
grabbing at all the flotsam and getsam out there. He inflicted Boggs
on Bucky but Wade, to the surprise of all started running bases and
playing team ball.
Can he get these new guys to do it? If they don't and he benches them
will Bluster-guts fire Buck? There's more than one kind of footstep.
|
88.2157 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Aug 02 1995 12:14 | 27 |
|
> Bases loaded 2 out who would you rather have up? Sierra, or 1 of
> these 3 Greenwell, Tinsley, O'Leary.
Great question, Chappy.
With bases loaded & 2 out, the most useful player is _clearly_
the one with the greatest chance of getting on base, except possibly
if you have a pitcher hitting next. This is the AL, you don't,
therefore the player with the greatest chance of getting on base
is my first choice.
And guess what, Chappy? That player's Greenwell, or very possibly
O'Leary. Right now, my choices in order would be: O'Leary,
Greenwell, Sierra, Tinsley.
It's difficult to compare Sierra to O'Leary overall right now,
because Sierra has been in his prime, whereas O'Leary's been
developing.
It's very easy, however, to compare Sierra & Greenwell...
In 1990 and 1993, Greenwell was the superior player. In 1991 and
1994 Sierra was. In 1992 Greenwell didn't play a whole lot, and
Sierra was far superior. This year, they're very comparable again.
Joe
|
88.2158 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Wed Aug 02 1995 12:15 | 7 |
| re .2156:
What a day to forget your decoder ring :^(
billl
|
88.2159 | Go Yanks | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Aug 02 1995 12:32 | 12 |
| Myshky=Prince Myshkin=The Idiot=Blusterguts=Mr.Bluster=George Steinbrenner
I don't know where they got The Idiot but Mr Bluster is Gammons
nickname.
Oh, Wade is Wade Boggs. He used to play here and had an his own abacus
for figuring his batting average real time. Now he's taking extra
bases with Buck Showalter who's the Yankee manager and his GM is Stick
- Al Michaels.
Oh, Wade is getting thrown out going for the extra base but now he
slides.
|
88.2160 | Just say Gene?? | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | the Halfway House Ruth Built... | Wed Aug 02 1995 12:38 | 4 |
|
Stick is not Al Michaels
|
88.2161 | one for two ain't bad - Al's in the booth, right? | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Aug 02 1995 13:14 | 1 |
|
|
88.2162 | | CAMONE::WAY | Software Mortician | Wed Aug 02 1995 13:15 | 1 |
| Yeah, he's still in the booth....
|
88.2163 | for 1995 | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Aug 02 1995 13:18 | 18 |
| > Sierra is also quite possibly the biggest cancer in
> all of baseball-- much more so even than Tartabull which is no mean
> feat. In spite of his mouth, I don't recall Tartabull being accused
> of not even _trying_,
I've already stated that the Yanks could be wishing they didn't have him
as early as next year, but for this year Sierra > Tartabull. Sierra's
putting up his numbers, despite all the problems in Oak. Tartabull wasn't,
and his problems in NY were self-inflicted. He wasn't hitting. Forget
what The Idiot did to him in the press and look at how Buck managed him.
He was only playing against lefties, and sometimes not even then (Ice
Williams started in his place against one lefthander !). Tartabull went
public with his demand to be traded, and there were rumblings within the
clubhouse that Tartabull was holding-out, using his injury as an excuse.
My point is even if the two are otherwise equal (stats-wise) Sierra was
enduring the pressure/heat in Oakland and producing while Danny wet his
pants and wanted to go home.
|
88.2164 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Aug 02 1995 14:17 | 32 |
|
> I've already stated that the Yanks could be wishing they didn't have him
> as early as next year, but for this year Sierra > Tartabull. Sierra's
> putting up his numbers, despite all the problems in Oak. Tartabull wasn't.
OK, let's look at _this_ idea.
Sierra's EqA this year: .274
Tartabull's EqA this year: .252
OK, it holds - there is a clear, notable difference.
Historically, who's better?
Tartabull, easily and clearly. If Sierra finishes the year hitting
better than Sierra, it will be the first time. (Well, I don't have
numbers before 1990, but Tartabull's been better every single year
since then.)
Is there any reason to believe Sierra might be better now anyway?
Yes. Tartabull has been consistently declining since age 28; this
year's performance is in line with his career path. Sierra's career
has been less consistent, but his performance this year has basically
matched that of last year. He's 3 years younger, and while he'll
likely decline at an earlier age than Tartabull, his performance
very well might be expected to be superior until he does (if
Tartabull doesn't rebound, of course).
Joe
|
88.2165 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Wed Aug 02 1995 15:59 | 3 |
|
ok I'll bite....why is it your so sure Siera will decline at an earlier age
than Tartabull? Facts please....
|
88.2166 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Aug 02 1995 16:25 | 37 |
|
> ok I'll bite....why is it your so sure Siera will decline at an earlier age
> than Tartabull? Facts please....
Well, I typed too fast, that's why.
I feel there is good reason to believe that Sierra will be through
in the majors at an earlier age than Tartabull.
Why?
Sierra's best season was at age 25, in 1991. He had a .319 EqA. He
has not topped .300 in any other season - he went to .293 in '92, .261
in '93, and .275 in '94; he's at .273 this year.
Tartabull's best season was at age 28, in 1991. He had a .350 EqA.
He declined to .324 in '92, .314 in '93, and .291 in '94.
All players, from age 27 (give or take) on, decline. Some do so
more slowly than others - usually the best players decline most
slowly. Tarabull's clearly in a steady decline; this year could
be a complete collapse, or a dip which he'll recover from.
Sierra, by appearances, already _has_ started his decline at an
earlier age. A player who has a .275 EqA at the age of 28 will,
9 times out of 10, last a shorter time than a player who has a
.350 EqA at the age of 28. Comparing actual performance, Tartabull's
always been better; comparing preformance relative to age is even
more telling, though...
Age 27 - Sierra .261; Tartabull .298
Age 28 - Sierra .275; Tartabull .350
Age 29 - Sierra .273; Tartabull .324
Which player would you expect to last longer?
Joe
|
88.2167 | no HOFer' | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Thu Aug 03 1995 15:59 | 8 |
|
2 out of the park, 3 runs in 7 innings and they think he looked good?
hahahaaa
I guess the Soxs are cooked!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
mike
|
88.2168 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Thu Aug 03 1995 16:12 | 13 |
| > 2 out of the park, 3 runs in 7 innings and they think he looked good?
>
> hahahaaa
>
> I guess the Soxs are cooked!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
On the good side, he got out of a bases-loaded jam, and he *did* K six in
a row (David Cone disease).
The most important thing is - the Yanks didn't gain any ground.
BTW - the Yanks fans reading this note should thank the Lord they traded
Danny "I hurt myself swinging" Tartabull...
|
88.2169 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 03 1995 16:20 | 14 |
| Someone explain the logic of saying that a pitcher who has had hall of fame
stuff for most of his career should be declared non-HOF stuff because he is
struggling with an injury.
Can you name a hall of fame fast ball pitcher that was able to dominate
hitters while pitching through arm problems that took 10 to 15 mph off his fast
ball? I can't.
"Clemens can't pitch with an injury there for he doesn't belong in the hall
of fame"?
Where's the sense to that?
George
|
88.2170 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Thu Aug 03 1995 16:28 | 6 |
| George, I basically agree with you, but to stretch the argument to
an extreme:
Herb Score
Bill Breen, I await your input...
|
88.2171 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Aug 03 1995 17:50 | 10 |
| If the question was what hall of fame pitcher was a dominant fastball
pitcher, lost the high hard one and then adapted and pitched credibly
for years after it would be Robin Roberts for one.
Tom Seaver does come to mind but Clemens isn't in Seaver's class.
Score had a great rookie season and then got hit in the eye off a
McDougall liner and when he came back was never the same but pitched
for awhile. Lonborg was similar, no dominating fastball after the knee
injury.
|
88.2172 | ... little league 1970? | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 03 1995 18:06 | 16 |
| So did Robin Roberts develop this pitching style and dominate hitters
while he was still injured?
We have yet to see a healthy Clemens not able to get batters out. So far
all we've seen is a somewhat wounded clemens running on 7 cylinders (back in
the days of V-8's that expression was a bit more meaningful) reduced to
being one of the better pitchers instead of a Cy Young candidate.
I'm still waiting for someone to explain to me the sense of this debate
which started with theory that if a great player gets injured he doesn't
deserve to be in the hall of fame if he can't play *** WHILE INJURED ***.
Can anyone point to a season that Clemens was healthy but didn't pitch
like he belonged in the hall of fame?
George
|
88.2173 | not to speak of not being any media darling like Kiner, Ashburn | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Aug 03 1995 18:46 | 17 |
| No, Roberts couldn't get hitters out to the Phillies satisfaction and
was released. I think there were arm problems associated. Robin
didn't have a lot of excuses but came to grips with the basic problem
that injury whining or no he didn't have the big,high, hard one.
He then smartened up, convinced Paul Richards of Baltimore to give him
a shot and became a valuable adjunct to an Oriole staff (of mostly
fireballers).
I'm not clear how much of Roger's problems are injury and how much a
need to adapt. I am reading that he is actively looking for a changeup
and smarter pitching strategy. So to that extent I agree, what's the
big problem.
But if Roberts didn't have his Oriole seasons he wouldn't have made HoF
and if Roger can't come up with some reasonable seasons thru '98-2000
he won't make the hall on numbers problems.
|
88.2174 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Aug 04 1995 12:00 | 11 |
| George, are you saying Clemens has pitched at a HoF level the last 3-4
years ?, or has he been hurt during this time ? I don't think he's
been hurt for this long, and I don't think he's pitched at a HoF level
either. If he gets in, he's going to have to put up some of those
longevity #s Bill mentioned.
An example from the everyday-player-lot is Thurman Munson. I don't
think anyone would say he wasn't a future HoF'er while he was playing.
He Bench and Fisk were the premier catchers of their time. The other
two are/will be in the HoF. But he didn't put up the career numbers,
so he's not in. I don't think it's fair, but it's reality.
|
88.2175 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Aug 04 1995 12:55 | 22 |
| <<< Note 88.2174 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>
>George, are you saying Clemens has pitched at a HoF level the last 3-4
>years ?, or has he been hurt during this time ? I don't think he's
>been hurt for this long, and I don't think he's pitched at a HoF level
>either. If he gets in, he's going to have to put up some of those
>longevity #s Bill mentioned.
Well in 91 and 92 he had 18 win season for a Red Sox team that was not all
that great on offense and in '94 and '95 he's been fighting injuries. That
leaves '93 where I think he had a winning record despite having pathetic
offense behind him. I'm not sure I seem to have lost my '93 numbers.
So I'd say he was HOF stuff through '92, fighting injuries since '94 with
'93 being somewhat of a question.
Yeah, longevity, I don't know, Sandy Koufax seemed to have a rather short run
as a superstar, didn't he make the Hall of Fame? As I remember he seemed to
emerge as a star pitcher around '59 or '60 and after '66 he was pretty much
toast. Should he have made the HOF based on that 7 or 8 years?
George
|
88.2176 | Pitchers, the Hall of Fame, etc. | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944 | Mon Aug 07 1995 08:00 | 50 |
| > If the question was what hall of fame pitcher was a dominant fastball
> pitcher, lost the high hard one and then adapted and pitched credibly
> for years after it would be Robin Roberts for one.
A comparable non-Hall-of-Fame pitcher would be Frank Tanana. He came up
with the Angels the year before I left Southern California ('73), forming
with Nolan Ryan a left-right fireballer combination that would have won
bunches of games on a decent team. He hurt his arm in '78 or '79, came
back and survived as a crafty junkballer into this decade.
Re Koufax: nobody who saw him pitch doubts for an instant that he belongs
in the Hall of Fame. But first, his career numbers (12 major league years):
W L PCT ERA G GS CG IP H BB SO ShO
165 87 .655 2.76 397 314 137 2324.1 1754 817 2396 40
Now that's pretty decent. Fine ERA, fine winning percentage, ratios of
hits-to-innings and strikeouts-to-innings brilliant. But that's his
whole 12-year career. It includes the three years in Brooklyn, when
he was walking 6 per 9 innings. It includes the three years in the LA
Coliseum, which was death to lefties. Look at his last six seasons,
1961-66 (* = led the league):
18 13 .581 3.52 42 35 15 255.2 212 96 269* 2
14 7 .667 2.54* 28 26 11 184.1 134 57 216 2
25* 5 .833* 1.88* 40 40 20 311 214 58 306* 11*
19 5 .792* 1.74* 29 28 15 223 154 53 223 7*
26* 8 .765* 2.04* 43 41 27* 335.2* 216 71 382* 8
27* 9 .750 1.73* 41 41* 27* 323* 241 77 317* 5*
Now that is simply the most dominant pitcher of his era. He was, by
the way, emphatically NOT toast after 1966. But he had arthritis in
his elbow (not surprising, after all those innings), and retired at
the age of 31, rather than make it worse.
He also had a World Series ERA of 0.95, though he was only 4-3.
One more item, taken from Bill James' Historical Baseball Abstract:
in 1963-64, given 5 runs of support, Koufax was 18-1. Given four
runs, he was 8-2. Given three, he was 9-0. Given two, he was 6-3.
Given one, he was 3-1. James writes: "Think about it. Over a two-
year period, given one, two, or three runs to work with, Sandy Koufax
was 18-4. That's an unbelievable accomplishment."
Another way of saying it: for five years, he was at worst the second
best lefthanded pitcher in the history of baseball (look at Lefty Grove's
numbers for the competition). If that doesn't belong in the Hall of
Fame, I don't know what does.
Steve
|
88.2177 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Aug 07 1995 09:17 | 17 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2176 by MUNDIS::SSHERMAN "Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944" >>>
>Another way of saying it: for five years, he was at worst the second
>best lefthanded pitcher in the history of baseball (look at Lefty Grove's
>numbers for the competition). If that doesn't belong in the Hall of
>Fame, I don't know what does.
No one's arguing that Koufax doesn't belong in the hall of fame. But there
is an argument floating around that no 5 years run earns anyone the hall of
fame.
As for Frank Tannanna, again was he dominant while he was injured or did he
come back to be that crafty pitcher after his injury healed. The argument
against Clemens is that he's not able to be dominant while fighting with
the injury.
George
|
88.2178 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Mon Aug 07 1995 09:20 | 15 |
|
It's like this George, I for one do not believe Clemens is a shoo-in
unlike about 95% of this notefile. Also the thing that bothers me the
most is that it's never ever Roger's fault when he's going bad. He's
either injuried and doesn't have a good team or the ump squeezed etc
etc wow!!!!!
If Clemens was the domiant pitcher he suspose to be he would have
risen above the supposely awful teams for reference I look to Steve
Carlton. Also if Clemens was a pitcher instead of just a flame thrower
these injuries wouldn't bother him as much.......
He's as over-hyped as they get........
mike
|
88.2179 | Tanana and Clemens | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944 | Mon Aug 07 1995 12:20 | 37 |
| Tanana's ERAs from 1974-80, all with California:
3.11 2.63 2.44 2.54* 3.65 3.90 4.15
Number of starts 35 33 34 31 33 17 31
Innings pitched 269 257 288 241 239 90 204
Strikeouts 180 269* 261 205 137 46 113
Wins 14 16 19 15 18 7 11
Losses 19 9 10 9 12 5 12
You can see where the power disappeared. Despite the injury, he missed
only half a season. When he came back, he was good enough to hang around
in the majors, and did into the 90s, but never again had an ERA under
three, and only once (1987, Detroit) had a .600 winning percentage.
In other words, his performance declined while he was hurt, and he was
never the same pitcher again. His ERA settles in at mid-to-high threes,
he wins about as much as he loses. Hits/IP is about one, K/9 about 5.
And, with little concession to age, he was exactly that same pitcher into
this decade, a total of 22 or 23 seasons.
As for Clemens? Some of his career numbers through 1992, his ninth
season:
G 273
GS 272
CG 89
WL 152-72, .679
IP 2031
H 1703
BB 552
SO 1873
ERA 2.80
If his arm had fallen off after that season, I expect he'd go into
the Hall.
Steve
|
88.2180 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Aug 07 1995 13:48 | 31 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2178 by CNTROL::CHILDS "Washing Machine" >>>
> If Clemens was the domiant pitcher he suspose to be he would have
> risen above the supposely awful teams for reference I look to Steve
> Carlton. Also if Clemens was a pitcher instead of just a flame thrower
> these injuries wouldn't bother him as much.......
He did rise above those teams. From the time he hit the majors through the
1992 season he was consistently around 20 wins. The Boston sports writers have
been making a big deal about how he hasn't won 20 games since '90 but I believe
he had 18 each in '91 and '92 which is probably better than many 20 game
seasons pitchers have had with better offensive teams.
I'm not sure why the wheels fell off in '93 season but in '94 and now in '95
he's been struggling with a sore arm. And while several people have given
examples of guys who have altered their style and come back from injuries, not
many guys dominate the league while they are injured.
Anyway, that was an impressive run through '92 and just about everyone back
then was saying that Clemens was the most sought after player in the game. Most
writers I read rated Clemens right up there with Bonds as the guy you'd want to
have on your team.
So I see 3 periods, before 92 when everyone felt Clemens walked on water,
after '93 when he's been injured, and '93 which is only 1 year which seemed
kind of strange.
Superstar when healthy, average pitcher when hurt, off year in '93, not
shabby. What do you want from a guy?
George
|
88.2181 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Aug 07 1995 13:52 | 15 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2179 by MUNDIS::SSHERMAN "Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944" >>>
>You can see where the power disappeared. Despite the injury, he missed
>only half a season. When he came back, he was good enough to hang around
>in the majors, and did into the 90s, but never again had an ERA under
>three, and only once (1987, Detroit) had a .600 winning percentage.
This is the 1st time I've ever seen anyone compare recovery time from
injuries. While it is interesting it really doesn't mean an awful lot if you
don't include information on what the injury was.
Recovery time for injuries can vary a great deal depending on the type of
injury, the time of year, the treatment, and a host of other things.
George
|
88.2182 | At a crossroads, but don't think he's done... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 07 1995 13:55 | 19 |
|
> I'm not sure why the wheels fell off in '93 season but in '94 and now in '95
> he's been struggling with a sore arm. And while several people have given
> examples of guys who have altered their style and come back from injuries, not
> many guys dominate the league while they are injured.
Again, Clemens did not struggle with a sore arm in 1994 (just last
season) and only lost out on another league ERA title because Steve
Ontiveros, a part-season starter, just qualified with the minimum IP.
I will admit that this season looks like a lost one for Clemens,
although he could still prove to be a pivotal player down the stretch.
He just doesn't have the velocity or the control. Too early to say
that he's all done, though, because the injuries do not seem to be
severe, and he's only one year removed from a performance that was
just fine...
glenn
|
88.2183 | Programmed cell death | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944 | Mon Aug 07 1995 14:03 | 13 |
| Sorry, George, I don't remember what the injury to Tanana was, beyond "a
sore arm". Don't remember if he had surgery, though I doubt it, else he'd
have been out longer. I don't remember a lot of things, these days.
Anyway, I really don't mean to compare recovery times. An awful lot has
happened in sports medicine in 20-some years.
I haven't seen Roger Clemens pitch in quite a while, but I believe the
numbers don't lie. They say to me that he's a first ballot HOFer, and
none of this "What have you done for me lately?" stuff will do anything
to change that.
Steve
|
88.2184 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Mon Aug 07 1995 14:06 | 10 |
|
didn't 3 of those teams he supposedly rose above win the division?
While I'll agree that a lack of good post-season numbers were the
results of his team the fact that he doesn't have any to speak of
should be a turnoff to the voters...........
unless he can turn around and post 3 or 4 more solid years I don't
think he deserves to go.......
mike
|
88.2185 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 07 1995 14:16 | 13 |
|
> Sorry, George, I don't remember what the injury to Tanana was, beyond "a
> sore arm". Don't remember if he had surgery, though I doubt it, else he'd
> have been out longer. I don't remember a lot of things, these days.
I'm 95% certain (don't ask where the other 5% went) that Tanana had the
dreaded rotator disease and did undergo surgery. It must not have been
the worst of tears as he returned the next season, but Tanana definitely
went from a 95 to an 80 MPH (and maybe 70-75 MPH by the end) pitcher
almost overnight.
glenn
|
88.2186 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Aug 07 1995 14:18 | 12 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2184 by CNTROL::CHILDS "Washing Machine" >>>
> didn't 3 of those teams he supposedly rose above win the division?
> While I'll agree that a lack of good post-season numbers were the
> results of his team the fact that he doesn't have any to speak of
> should be a turnoff to the voters...........
No. The BoSox won the division in '86, '88, and '90. The "rose above"
expression refers '91 and '92 when he won 18 games each despite an offense
that was a shadow of the division champ years.
George
|
88.2187 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Mon Aug 07 1995 14:36 | 8 |
|
looks like 3 division wins to me. you didn't specify 91 and 92 until
I pointed out the winners........
by the end of the year Clemens will be on the scrapheap if he's not
already there and Drew will be the new Gawd in town.........
mike
|
88.2188 | for Groaner... | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Mon Aug 07 1995 14:46 | 6 |
|
I figure I'll answer the question before you ask:
"What has John Valentin done lately?"
He hit his 18th homer last night. I believe he has about 60 RBI.
|
88.2189 | Bigtime clutch too... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 07 1995 14:51 | 14 |
|
> He hit his 18th homer last night. I believe he has about 60 RBI.
Beautiful piece of hitting too. That overhead Skydome camera showed
just how far JV had to extend his arms to get to that pitch and yet
still hit it with power. Something you don't normally see from anyone
but the big boys, but Val has got some muscle in those arms...
The ESPN graphic flashed up before that AB said it all: highest
slugging percentage amongst all SS from 1993-95, ahead of Ripken,
Larkin, Blauser, Cordero, Omar Vizquel... ;-)
glenn
|
88.2190 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Aug 07 1995 15:04 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2187 by CNTROL::CHILDS "Washing Machine" >>>
> looks like 3 division wins to me. you didn't specify 91 and 92 until
> I pointed out the winners........
What are you talking about? We've been talking about '91 and '92 for some
time now. No one ever suggested that the teams of the late '80s that contended
for and won divisions were not good teams.
> by the end of the year Clemens will be on the scrapheap if he's not
> already there and Drew will be the new Gawd in town.........
So what about Babe Ruth, was he any good? I don't see him doing much these
days. Would you say he's on baseball's scrap heap?
George
|
88.2191 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill! | Mon Aug 07 1995 16:29 | 10 |
| MikeC, Roger ain't been King Of The Sports Hill around these
parts for a few years now. His descent from the top spot roughly
coincided with the Patsies ousting the Sox as the local fave. It's
Drew at number one these days and Mo at number two with Roger lumped
in with Cam Neely and a bunch of others.
BTW - interesting Globe series on autographs, memorabilia and what
the losers and get-a-lifers who traffic in both have done to
ruin what used to be a sweet gesture.
|
88.2192 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Mon Aug 07 1995 17:03 | 6 |
|
I'd agree Tommy, except that it's still never ever Roger's fault
when he looses with the press and when he wins he's the greatest
with the press..........
mike
|
88.2193 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Aug 07 1995 18:15 | 4 |
| You haven't been reading the Globe lately. The columnists have been beating
up on him more than ever before.
George
|
88.2194 | Red Sox bullpens have probably cost Clemens 20-25 wins, career | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 08 1995 09:36 | 14 |
|
Sox win 5th in a row; Clemens looking good but the bullpen giving
away his "W" in an easy 3-run save opportunity (insert Mike C
disclaimer that a pitcher as great as Roger claims to be should be
able to complete all games ;-). As of this morning there are only
4 teams in the entire AL with records _above_ .500, with about 50
to play. It's beginning to look like it will take a monumental
choke for the Red Sox _not_ to make the playoffs (albeit cheapened
by the wildcard travesty-- sadly, what at the surface looks like
an exciting Boston-New York race to the wire may not mean much more
than a one-game homefield edge in the opening round).
glenn
|
88.2195 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Tue Aug 08 1995 14:04 | 10 |
|
Clemens ought to pay me to ride him....I can't think of one time when
I've seriously trashed him in here, that he didn't have a good outing
right after that.
20 to 25 career victories??? Cmon Glenn a thrower as good as Clemens
should be finishing his own ballgames. Afterall you're always telling
us what a horse he is..........
;^)
|
88.2196 | Way too ugly | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | How can people live in Florida? | Tue Aug 08 1995 14:39 | 13 |
| Gammons again gushes big-time over Roger's performance, on baseball
tonight calling it as good a performance as Clemens has had all season,
how he had total command of his sinker and his fastball, yadda da,
yadda da, yadda da.
Well, eight hits in less than seven innings isn't too great in my book,
especially against the lowly Blue Jays. Gammons to me has absolutely
no credibility at all. He has turned into Dan Duquette's public
relations man, and Roger's personal ego-massager. Gammons is good when
he sticks to reporting facts and disseminating information, but I can't
stand him in his cheerleader role.
NAZZ
|
88.2197 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Tue Aug 08 1995 17:29 | 4 |
|
I second that on Gammons.....I use to enjoy reading his columns
and his insight on the game....now he bleeds redsox all over the
place and is no better than a trash magazine writer....
|
88.2198 | Wakefield....Wins again. | FABSIX::E_MAXWELL | Oh flight attendent! | Wed Aug 09 1995 02:39 | 4 |
| Sox just keep rolling along.....
Lil Ed
|
88.2199 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Aug 09 1995 09:24 | 4 |
| Yeah they rolled over some nobody team last night, who were those guys?
Couldn't seem to hit anything.
George
|
88.2200 | Cleveland Snarf! | SPIKED::SWEENEY | Tom Sweeney in OGO | Wed Aug 09 1995 09:34 | 3 |
| Are they really the best team in baseball?
zamboni
|
88.2201 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 09 1995 09:52 | 12 |
| A couple of months ago this would have sounded silly, but could we be
talking about Cy Young candidate Tim Wakefield? 13-1, 1.61 ERA, (H+BB/K)
about 1.07, has won every game they've needed him to win - not too shabby...
If he keeps it up and the Sox win the division, anything less than 3rd in
the voting would be a travesty. The other candidates would be Martinez,
the Big Unit, and Langston. As it is, I think he should have Comeback
Player of the Year sewn up.
Paul G. (aka Groaner) - I'd be interested in your take on this.
Roland
|
88.2202 | Mission Wakefield Accomplished! | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 09 1995 10:02 | 22 |
|
> A couple of months ago this would have sounded silly, but could we be
> talking about Cy Young candidate Tim Wakefield?
We could be, and have been... ;-) Seriously, I mentioned the Cy Young
back when Wakefield was inexplicably left off the All-Star team in
favor of Eric Hanson...
> If he keeps it up and the Sox win the division, anything less than 3rd in
> the voting would be a travesty. The other candidates would be Martinez,
> the Big Unit, and Langston. As it is, I think he should have Comeback
> Player of the Year sewn up.
Uh-uh. If Wakefield keeps going as he has, anything less than *1st*,
unanimous selection, would be a travesty. He's tied for the league
lead in wins despite being 4-5 starts behind the other candidates (he
wasn't called up until May). And the 1.61 ERA in this day and age is
otherworldly. If the vote were taken today I think it'd be a
landslide...
glenn
|
88.2203 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 09 1995 10:06 | 16 |
|
Glenn,
My thinking (regarding "no worse than 3rd"):
Personally, I think he should be first. But Martinez and Langston
are close in wins, have excellent ERAs (though not as flashy), and
are also pitching for division leaders. That might make it close
enough to come down to personal preference, and it's hard to predict
whether a lot of the voters tend to think of a knuckleballer as a
"one-trick pony"...
Plus, I'm crossing my fingers that he keeps it up. After his amazing stretch
drive for the Pirates, the magic disappeared as quickly as it came...
Roland
|
88.2204 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Wed Aug 09 1995 10:07 | 6 |
|
ESPN compared Wakefield's stats with Greg Maddux's stats. Wakefield
had better stats in every category. They were tied with 6 complete
games.
Ron
|
88.2205 | definitely Wakefield in game 1 if it happens... | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 09 1995 10:10 | 3 |
|
...I wonder if they'll try an experiment with him on two days rest sometime
during the season.
|
88.2206 | | SALEM::DODA | No Alibis:Don'tGoThruLifeTryingToJustify | Wed Aug 09 1995 10:11 | 3 |
| He threw on two days rest earlier this year in Oakland didn't he?
daryll
|
88.2207 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Wed Aug 09 1995 11:19 | 3 |
|
If he does win the cy young, how much money do you think it'll take to
re-sign him?
|
88.2208 | Not a problem, Yankee fans... ;-) | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 09 1995 11:36 | 19 |
|
> If he does win the cy young, how much money do you think it'll take to
> re-sign him?
Who knows, but the good thing is that I don't think Wakefield can be a
free agent under any circumstances. Even though he's playing with a
1-year contract at minimum pay, he'd only have 2-1/2 ML years in
(didn't appear in the bigs at all last season).
I wouldn't break the bank on Wakefield, because he could "lose it"
again. But as far as worrying about that happening late this season,
it should be noted that in Pittsburgh he didn't lose it overnight, he
lost it over the off-season. Wakefield was outstanding in the 1992
NLCS after posting an 8-1 record, 2.15 ERA that season. He had the
Braves baffled...
glenn
|
88.2209 | for Chappy | WMGEN1::abs002p2.nqo.dec.com::may_br | BRUCE MAY | Fri Aug 11 1995 13:26 | 9 |
|
________________________
| Objects in mirror are |
| quickly moving out of |
| sight. |
_________| |
_________________________________|
|
88.2210 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Aug 11 1995 13:41 | 1 |
| Where is Chappy Sierra today anyway?
|
88.2211 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Fri Aug 11 1995 13:46 | 5 |
|
I think Chappy went to the Gerry Garcia memorial lovefest. Pretty
sure Gerry was a Yankee fan.........
;^)
|
88.2212 | How did all the N.Y. fans get to L.A. | WMOIS::FASSETT_E | Nothing beats a Bud MAN!!! | Fri Aug 11 1995 15:15 | 4 |
| Chappy is out SICK today. I wonder why!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
FAST EDDIE
Maybe he was in Los Angeles last night, I think he threw out the first
ball!!!
|
88.2213 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffsex | Mon Aug 14 1995 10:09 | 3 |
|
You guys are funny!
|
88.2214 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Mon Aug 14 1995 10:26 | 9 |
|
________________________
| There are no longer |
| any objects in the |
| mirror. |
_________| |
_________________________________|
|
88.2215 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Mon Aug 14 1995 11:22 | 9 |
|
________________________
| The Driver of this |
| Vehicle will be losing|
| alot of passengers |
_________| soon. |
_________________________________|
|
88.2216 | Back to the wildcard bus, Chap... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 14 1995 11:32 | 11 |
|
Until further notice, a Yankee fan's first responsibility in
scoreboard-watching is now focused on Texas, Seattle, et al for
the wildcard spot. I'd prefer to see the Yankees win that and
have all of Cleveland, Boston, New York in the playoffs. That'd
be some fun. It'd also set up that first-round Cleveland-Boston
series. Might as well go up against the best, and get your money's
worth. Ride that po' po' underdog role for all it's worth...
glenn
|
88.2217 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Mon Aug 14 1995 11:40 | 10 |
|
We are not conceding the division yet. Sox have blown bigger leads
than this before. Still hoping for the division because I think we
match up better vs Cle than Cal. Cone and Blackjack shut cleveland down
and they would pitch game 1,2, 4,5. Hate going against them Cal
Lefties.
chap
|
88.2218 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Mon Aug 14 1995 11:45 | 20 |
| Putting aside all Red Sox/Yankee posturing...
The Sox are up 9 games as of today. The two teams have six games remaining
against each other - I'd say it's pretty realistic to say that the Yanks
*have* to win 4 of the 6, and pretty much need to win at least 2 out of 3
in the upcoming series. The teams then have 39 games left against other
teams, and the Yanks would have to make up 7 games in that span. So in
addition to needing 4 out of 6, the Yanks would also need something along
these lines in the remaining games:
New York 24-15 .615
Boston 17-22 .436
So a team playing just over .500 will have to play just over .600, and a team
playing .600 has to play at .430 or so. The Yanks aren't out of it, but I'm
pretty comfortable with where the Sox sit.
With all the writing on the rear-view mirrors that I'm seeing, it's a wonder
the driver can *see* anything...
|
88.2219 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Mon Aug 14 1995 12:33 | 9 |
| With Clemens apparently turning the corner and Cormier being as sharp
as he is (to go along with what should be a pretty fresh arm), the Red
Sox are riding the Wakefield juggernaut all the way to an opening round
Cleveland series. Yanks are toast.
Say what you want about Kennedy, but he's got these guys playing good
baseball.
Steve
|
88.2220 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Mon Aug 14 1995 12:38 | 2 |
|
but DD will get all the credit........
|
88.2221 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Aug 14 1995 12:41 | 2 |
88.2222 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Mon Aug 14 1995 12:59 | 5 |
|
a proven fact. I trash him he responds.........I don't have his
baseball card on my cabinet for nothin'.......
;^)
|
88.2223 | Keep the bashes comin', MikeC; like you said Rog needs it | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 14 1995 13:01 | 13 |
|
> Anyone know how Clemens did this weekend? Mike, what was that you were
> saying about Clemens?
Wouldn't it be something if because of his injuries, Roger was
well-rested for the playoffs and put up a dominant postseason, so
we'd get to hear MikeC say, "Yabbut, he really doesn't get it
done in the regular season anymore, which is what gets you there"...
;-)
glenn
|
88.2224 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Mon Aug 14 1995 13:15 | 8 |
|
see this is exactly what I mean. The guy has back to back decent
outings and you guys are acting like he's better than Greg Maddux.
the way I see it is he'll probably pitch good until the end and then
start whinning to Kennedy that he should start game 1 instead of
Wakefield, Kennedy will fold in and the Soxs will be out of it...
mike
|
88.2225 | when you find a lemon, squeeze it | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Aug 14 1995 14:21 | 2 |
88.2226 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Aug 14 1995 15:35 | 21 |
| Amazing what a winning streak will do for you. Two weeks ago (ie: before
the 11-game winning streak), Kennedy was getting drilled and the press was
talking about the "fading Sox" (sub-.500 for a month and a half) and how
Balt and NY would both get in the playoffs.
Now Canseco is talking about sweeping the Yanks and ending the race...and
the fans have once again lost control.
I'm glad to see others in here bashing Gammons. I've noticed the change
for a couple of years now. However, I do give him credit for his
comments yesterday stating that this has been a bizzare season and
Boston has benefited most with half of the regulars having career
years and a couple of rejects (Hanson and Wakefield) putting them
in the driver's seat for the playoffs.
I'll agree with one thing said in here, with what appears to be a safe
Boston lead, this series is diminished to one for bragging rights and
no more important (actually less) to NY's quest for a playoff spot than
the upcoming Seattle series. Takes the edge off, don't it ?
|
88.2227 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Mon Aug 14 1995 15:45 | 16 |
| >I'll agree with one thing said in here, with what appears to be a safe
>Boston lead,
These are the Red Sox. No lead is safe, except when it's bigger than the
amount of games remaining... :-)
I'll get nervous if they get swept, but only then. And I don't think Cormier
is going to lose.
The most interesting matchup (to me) will be Pettite/Eshelman. A series with
the Sox and Yankees 1-2 in the division, with rookie going against rookie. I
believe this is also the last game of the series.
Joe, are you a "Wakefield for Cy Young" believer?
Roland
|
88.2228 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Aug 14 1995 17:28 | 8 |
| >Joe, are you a "Wakefield for Cy Young" believer?
I don't really care about individual awards, but I do believe that he
is the difference for them. Without him they'd definitely be caught
in the East. What AL pitcher can claim he's better ?
I hope he messes up once. I'd like to see him throw that crap with
his confidence shaken a little.
|
88.2229 | Control is the big worry... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Aug 14 1995 18:38 | 11 |
|
> I hope he messes up once. I'd like to see him throw that crap with
> his confidence shaken a little.
He has given up 12 HRs, tied for the team lead, an amazing _half_
of his 24 ERs on the season. Home runs off the knuckler that
doesn't knuckle just come with the territory. Fortunately there
has been damn near nothing else...
glenn
|
88.2230 | Hanson joins in the fun | FABSIX::E_MAXWELL | Oh flight attendent! | Tue Aug 15 1995 01:53 | 18 |
| Sox keep rolling along......
Tim Naehring homered and drove in four runs while Erik Hanson allowed
eight hits over 8
1/3 innings as the streaking Boston Red Sox defeated the New York
Yankees, 9-3, for their
12th straight victory.
The Red Sox opened a 10-game lead in the American League East by
winning the opener of
the three-game series between the top teams in the division.
Boston's first-place lead is its biggest since September 18th, 1986,
when the Red Sox held a
10 1/2 game lead.
Lil Ed
|
88.2231 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Tue Aug 15 1995 09:26 | 13 |
| >I hope he messes up once. I'd like to see him throw that crap with
>his confidence shaken a little.
I'm curious - why is it crap? The idea is to fool the batter - the same
as with any other breaking pitch, such as a curve or a slider, and the same
as changing speeds.
Can I assume that you wouldn't refer to it as "crap" if the front of the
uniform said "New York" instead of Boston?
You're right, though, regarding the importance of throwing the pitch with
confidence. Supposedly, the idea is to just go up there and let it fly,
not thinking too much about directing the ball.
|
88.2232 | Wildcard bandwagon, Chap, wildcard... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 15 1995 11:12 | 14 |
|
Playoff tickets will be going on sale in a matter of weeks! I feel
fortunate that I didn't cancel this year (and it was close, well past
the deadline, with threatening letters on loss of privs delivered and
received), and it just figures that coming off three straight dead
seasons and a devastating strike, with absolutely no expectations this
would be the season for the Sox. Things like that are just part of
this franchise's history...
I sincerely hope that they do open against Cleveland. Shoot at the
best...
glenn
|
88.2233 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 15 1995 12:39 | 12 |
88.2234 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Tribe owns Yanks... bye in playoffs if they meet | Tue Aug 15 1995 14:10 | 6 |
88.2235 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Aug 15 1995 14:58 | 6 |
| > -< Wildcard bandwagon, Chap, wildcard... >-
As I said before, the difference is one home game in a 5-game series
(in a sport where homefield means least). I just want to get there.
The divisional race absolutely means nothing. (and yes, I would say
that if they were in first 10 games ahead)
|
88.2236 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:04 | 10 |
| >I'm curious - why is it crap?
>Can I assume that you wouldn't refer to it as "crap" if the front of the
>uniform said "New York" instead of Boston?
Ah, you forget that the Yanks had 2 knuckleballers on the same staff (both
Niekros). While I took the W's when they came, I couldn't stand it.
It's a "freak pitch". In the macho sports world it wreaks of a "sissy"
quality.
|
88.2237 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:20 | 19 |
| >It's a "freak pitch". In the macho sports world it wreaks of a "sissy"
>quality.
This still begs the question, "Why?"
Carried to it's extreme, your argument is that there should be nothing but
fastballs. And you'd better hope the batter makes an out before he catches
up to your fastball.
The effectiveness of curves and sliders depends on movement,
and a changeup is just a "gentle" version of a fastball. How would
they be any less of a "freak pitch".
>Ah, you forget that the Yanks had 2 knuckleballers on the same staff (both
>Niekros).
No, I didn't. In fact, that was part of what prompted the question :-)
Wasn't Phil something like 16-10 one year as a Yankee? The ERA and ratio
were poor, but what the hell, it wasn't Rotisserie...
|
88.2238 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:22 | 14 |
| Well Joe, you've got the exact opposite opinion of Wakefield than I
and I'm sure 99% of Sox fans do. I'm in absolute awe of his pitching
performances this year and have not missed out on either listening or
watching any of his starts. You're talking about a guy who has come
close to pitching several no-hitters in a very short period of time,
and has been dominant with a capital D this year.
If you can actually sit there and tell me you'd make the references
you're making about him were he doing this for the Yankees, then I'm at
a loss for words, other than to say there's no hope for you as a fan of
baseball.
Steve
|
88.2239 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:24 | 8 |
|
In all of Joe's notes he has been nothing but Neutral and
Objective.
Chap
|
88.2240 | "Sissy" means it's easier to hit, right? | LJSRV2::KNIPSTEIN | | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:25 | 11 |
| RE. .2236
So if it's a "sissy" pitch, shouldn't those big, macho hitters be able
to crush it?
As a former knuckleballer (a sidearm one at that), I would argue that
there is as much of a place in sports for finesse as there is for sheer
power. Regardless of whether the third strike is a knuckleball or a
fastball, it's still a K in the score book!
Steve
|
88.2241 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:26 | 7 |
| > In all of Joe's notes he has been nothing but Neutral and
> Objective.
At least as much so as the rest of us... :-)
Seriously, he's usually very good at explaining his opinions, which is why I
want to hear what differentiates the knuckleball as a "freak pitch".
|
88.2243 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:38 | 4 |
| >He could be out there in
>tea length pink tulle throwin' underhand... wouldn't matter to me.
I think this would be a fashion faux pas, given his goatee...
|
88.2245 | | CAMONE::WAY | Officer on deck! | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:53 | 18 |
| I think, overall, the objective of the pitcher is to get the batter out,
either by strikeout, or by causing him to hit (preferably) a ground ball.
There are many ways to do this. You can blow the ball by him whilst the ball
trails a flaming afterburner effect, or you can sneak the ball by him with
spin and movement.
Some people in this world are fast, some people in the world are strong,
some are quick, some aren't.
To me, the knuckleball is probably the ultimate finesse pitch, and the brutal
fastball is the ultimate strength-power-testosterone, lack of finesse pitch.
Either is perfectly acceptable if it gets the batter out.
And let's face it -- Tim Wakefield has been getting people out.
|
88.2246 | RE: .2245 | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:55 | 4 |
|
This note makes me want to sing "We Are the World"...
But that would violate the Geneva Convention.
|
88.2247 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Aug 15 1995 16:04 | 9 |
| Hey, I don't like the pitch. If Steve wants to believe that I'd feel
differently if Wakefield was on my team, that's his choice. But I was
there and I didn't like it.
My comments re: "sissy pitch" were added to spice-up the conversation,
and they obviously did. Most of that comes from reading quotes from
ML dugouts...players yelling, "throw the ball like a man, will ya...".
And Buck has said he believest the pitch should be made illegal...
something about not being able to prepare for it, etc...
|
88.2248 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Aug 15 1995 16:06 | 10 |
| I read an interesting view of the knuckler in the Globe the other day. Word
was that when Bobby Bonilla got traded to the O's he said he wouldn't bat left
handed against Wakefield because the last time he did that against a knuckler
it messed him up for weeks.
I didn't see the game Sunday, anyone notice if he actually did that? I wonder
if hitting rightie is better because he doesn't have to look at the flutter
as long.
George
|
88.2249 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Tue Aug 15 1995 16:18 | 21 |
| >My comments re: "sissy pitch" were added to spice-up the conversation,
>and they obviously did.
I figured as much.
>And Buck has said he believest the pitch should be made illegal...
>something about not being able to prepare for it, etc...
Oh - well, if Buck believes it, it *must* be gospel.
The guy's a good manager. He isn't the defender of truth, justice,
and the American way...
There *are* ways to prepare for it in some respects. Move up in the box
to give it less time to break. Shorten your swing so you can react quicker.
You really haven't said anything to convince me that there's anything unique
regarding the knuckleball vs. any other breaking pitch (and I have no idea if
you care :-)
FWIW - how much time did John Kruk have to prepare for a Randy Johnson
heater? :-)
|
88.2250 | Bobby Bo vs. the knuckler | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Tue Aug 15 1995 16:20 | 5 |
| > I didn't see the game Sunday, anyone notice if he actually did that?
I don't know, but after he fouled one off and looked bad in the process,
he started laughing at himself. It was the first time I saw the guy
display a sense of humor.
|
88.2251 | Buck really said that?! | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 15 1995 16:43 | 15 |
|
> In the macho sports world it wreaks of a "sissy" quality.
That means a guy like Jimmy Key is just one rung up the wussy ladder.
What's all this sh*& with changing speeds? Hum it up there like a
man, Jimmy...
Was Buck's tongue planted firmly in cheek when he made that statement?
Hard to believe a ML manager would be whining that something should be
banned because you can't prepare properly for it. Then again, for all
his professionalism, if there's been one big complaint with Showalter
it's that he's an anal-retentive control freak. Lighten up, Buck...
glenn
|
88.2252 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 15 1995 16:45 | 5 |
88.2253 | They're coming at ya out of the woodwork, 'Saw... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Aug 15 1995 16:52 | 9 |
|
> This note makes me want to sing "We Are the World"...
>
> But that would violate the Geneva Convention.
Roland Duprez, the next Tommy Brydie?
glenn
|
88.2254 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Tue Aug 15 1995 17:04 | 4 |
| > Roland Duprez, the next Tommy Brydie?
No need for a next - the original is still around. Notes-wise,
I can't compare.
|
88.2255 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Tue Aug 15 1995 17:14 | 4 |
|
Bonilla batted right handed against Wakefield.
Ron
|
88.2256 | Shhhhh | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Wed Aug 16 1995 08:43 | 15 |
|
Whats that noise?
Oh thats Mike Heiser in this Sox note today.
|
88.2257 | One hiccup on the road to division flag... | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Wed Aug 16 1995 08:55 | 4 |
| Chap, how many games have the Yankees picked up since they added
Rubenoma to the roster?
Steve
|
88.2258 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Wed Aug 16 1995 09:24 | 4 |
|
Sox showed last night what will be their ultimate downfall....."D"...
of lack of it...
|
88.2259 | | CAMONE::WAY | Officer on deck! | Wed Aug 16 1995 09:32 | 12 |
| Glenn, let 'em come.....
I was just trying to make the point that in team sports you usually need all
varying skill sets to be truly competitive. I can think of one sport near and
dear to my heart where that *is* gospel.
I'd take a pitcher with a 14-1 record even if he pitched with the ball in
the crook of his elbow....
'Saw
|
88.2260 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Wed Aug 16 1995 09:36 | 9 |
|
Steve,
Take the amount of Rings Teddy Ballgame, Yaz, Rice, and
Mo has won and thats how many games the Yanks have picked up since
Sierra was added.
Its easy math... Just Multiply "77" by 0.
|
88.2261 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Wed Aug 16 1995 09:40 | 4 |
|
Or you can take the amount of rings won by Donnie Baseball. :^)
Ron
|
88.2262 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Aug 16 1995 10:53 | 16 |
| > -< One hiccup on the road to division flag... >-
And given that the division championship gets you one more home
game (in a sport where home field means squat) and a date with
Cleveland in the first round, it's a BFD.
Let's get our teams to the ALCS where this bragging crap will mean
something.
> Chap, how many games have the Yankees picked up since they added
> Rubenoma to the roster?
No Yankee fan made Ruben Sierra a *savior*. Trading Tartabull was
addition by subtraction. Getting a ML body for him (who has 17 RBI
in his 17 Yankee games) was a big bonus.
|
88.2263 | Can I pick 'em or what? | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 16 1995 11:10 | 4 |
| >I'll get nervous if they get swept, but only then. And I don't think Cormier
>is going to lose.
For my next trick, I'll pick the 1996 Republican nominee for President...
|
88.2264 | Then, now, and always, it's called annual bragging rights | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 16 1995 11:56 | 14 |
|
> And given that the division championship gets you one more home
> game (in a sport where home field means squat) and a date with
> Cleveland in the first round, it's a BFD.
It wasn't a BFD when the Yanks acquired McDowell and Wetteland and
were proclaimed clear frontrunners in the AL East, while Boston had
no chance. It wasn't a BFD when the Yanks picked up Cone and Sierra
in order to finally make their inevitable run (see 88.2146). It's
only a BFD now out of pure Yankee-rationalization...
glenn
|
88.2265 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Aug 16 1995 12:32 | 13 |
88.2266 | Where's he at? | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Aug 16 1995 12:44 | 11 |
| So where is Tommy Brydie? In Vegas for the McNeeley - Tyson fight?
At the Grand Canyon getting ideas on how to yawn when the next Way
essay comes out (btw - I like them)
At Niagara Falls getting ready for all the whining and crying of Yankee
fans now and Cleveland fans after the ACLS?
At ...
|
88.2267 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Wed Aug 16 1995 13:11 | 9 |
|
Haven't seen any tears from any Yankee Fans????
Remember Sox are only up 8 games for that WC spot. They better hope
Sea and Tex keep losin!!
Chap
|
88.2268 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Aug 16 1995 14:01 | 12 |
| RE<<< Note 88.2263 by IMBETR::DUPREZ "The stars might lie, but the numbers never do..." >>>
> -< Can I pick 'em or what? >-
>
>>I'll get nervous if they get swept, but only then. And I don't think Cormier
>>is going to lose.
>
Well technically he lost but actually you made a good call. Only 2 the 6
runs he gave up were earned.
George
|
88.2269 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 16 1995 14:07 | 8 |
|
Yeah, but I wasn't doing an over/under on earned runs allowed... :-)
The point was that I thought if the Sox were only going to get one win in
this series, it was going to come from him. He's been pitching very well
since being moved into the rotation. Of course, Dan "The Idiot" Shaughnessy
then writes a column mentioning how "Rheal-ity Bites". Yes, Dan, Rheal's
ERA of 3.23 is really doing in the team...
|
88.2270 | Have a seat Chap... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:08 | 6 |
|
Sox up 4-0 in the 3rd...
glenn
|
88.2271 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:17 | 7 |
| > Sox up 4-0 in the 3rd...
Too soon to speak, but if this kept up, it would be something. Both
previous games in the series have been blowouts one way or the other.
3rd inning is a little too soon to say anything. You aren't trying
to instigate now, are you Glenn?
|
88.2272 | | CAMONE::WAY | Officer on deck! | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:21 | 4 |
| Glenn is always objective and neutral in this file.....
hth,
'Saw
|
88.2273 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:36 | 8 |
|
4-3 Bottom of 4 Glen.
Sit your objective Butt down. Eschelman is getting hit hard!!!
|
88.2274 | I guess I should check with Glenn to see what I'm thinking today | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:41 | 13 |
| > It wasn't a BFD when the Yanks acquired McDowell and Wetteland and
> were proclaimed clear frontrunners in the AL East, while Boston had
> no chance. It wasn't a BFD when the Yanks picked up Cone and Sierra
> in order to finally make their inevitable run (see 88.2146). It's
> only a BFD now out of pure Yankee-rationalization...
Since the change was implemented (especially the way MLB implemented it,
with re: to home field and best-of-5 format) I haven't put much importance
on winning the division (as long as you're the best of the rest, which I
think the Yanks are). All that matters is that you get in. The divisional
stuff is pure chest-thumping. And it's too bad. The only way a Boston-NY
regular season series will mean anything is if the loser is thrown out of
the wildcard race, and this series won't do that.
|
88.2275 | Just make it a weekly check, Joe... ;-) | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:53 | 9 |
|
> -< I guess I should check with Glenn to see what I'm thinking today >-
It might help. Again, on August 1 (.2141,.2146) the Yankees'
divisional standing, closing fast on the Sox, seemed to be the
issue. Now, magically, it's meaningless...
glenn
|
88.2276 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:59 | 6 |
|
Eschelman Out
Yanks tie it 4-4. The lefties (none started all coming in now)
Joe hudson pitching.
|
88.2277 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 16 1995 16:15 | 4 |
| >The lefties (none started all coming in now)
I'm not sure what you mean by this.
I take it the Yankees hit better with their left-handed lineup?
|
88.2278 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Wed Aug 16 1995 16:16 | 10 |
|
Yes Roland especially vs RH relievers.
Joe Hudson in.
Greenwell hit a ball over Bernie's head with Naehring on first
Naehring got thrown out at home ending the 6th.
Chap
|
88.2279 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 16 1995 16:37 | 6 |
| > Greenwell hit a ball over Bernie's head with Naehring on first
> Naehring got thrown out at home ending the 6th.
How does that saying go?
"Never make the first or the last out at home"???
|
88.2280 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Wed Aug 16 1995 16:43 | 8 |
|
I thought the saying was ...at third??
:-)
Chap
|
88.2281 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 16 1995 16:54 | 4 |
|
You're right...
Not enough caffeine today.
|
88.2282 | Have fun with that all-imprtant wildcard race, boys | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 16 1995 17:11 | 7 |
|
Sox win, 7-4. Suspiciously things got very quiet in here, and in the
Yanks file.
glenn
|
88.2283 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 16 1995 17:13 | 7 |
|
Well, common sense tells me the Sox will take the division, but I'd say the
Yanks still have a chance if they sweep the one remaining series and play
well the rest of the way.
Who drove in the last 3 runs? Was John "what has he done lately" Valentin
involved?
|
88.2284 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Aug 16 1995 17:21 | 10 |
|
> Who drove in the last 3 runs? Was John "what has he done lately" Valentin
> involved?
Nope. Mo 2B, Jose 2B (RBI), Greenwell 2B (RBI), eventually scores on
PB.
glenn
|
88.2285 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Aug 16 1995 17:34 | 10 |
88.2286 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Aug 16 1995 18:11 | 17 |
| > It might help. Again, on August 1 (.2141,.2146) the Yankees'
> divisional standing, closing fast on the Sox, seemed to be the
> issue. Now, magically, it's meaningless...
The notes you're referring to were in response to .2137, and were
aimed at Boston's coming down to earth and the Yanks coming up to
their *high* level (afterall, they're the team having the miraculous
season, while the Yanks have struggled most of the year). No thought
was given to the advantages of getting the division title over the
wildcard spot. I've believed for quite some time that the wildcard
is going to come out of the East.
At that time it was purely a reality-check that there wasn't much
difference in the two team's records, despite the perceived performances.
Just as today's standings show that Boston is clearly going to win
the division. But if both are going to get in the playoffs, the
difference gained is negligible (if there is one --> Cle).
|
88.2287 | | WMGEN1::abs003p7.nqo.dec.com::may_br | BRUCE MAY | Wed Aug 16 1995 23:40 | 6 |
| Geez, you guys make it worth logging in on vacation.... Thanks!
Yanksme fans are talking like they got a 10 game lead for that wild card
spot, or something. I've suddenly Heisered into a big Ken Griffey Jr. fan.
brews
|
88.2288 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Tribe owns Yanks... bye in playoffs if they meet | Thu Aug 17 1995 10:01 | 8 |
88.2289 | no hedgin' here... | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Aug 17 1995 10:58 | 5 |
| >Yanksme fans are talking like they got a 10 game lead for that wild card
>spot, or something. I've suddenly Heisered into a big Ken Griffey Jr. fan.
C'mon Bruce, you know me by now...I ain't 'fraidy-scared to put my
predictions out there.
|
88.2290 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Thu Aug 17 1995 11:15 | 5 |
| >Yanksme fans are talking like they got a 10 game lead for that wild card
>spot, or something. I've suddenly Heisered into a big Ken Griffey Jr. fan.
At this point you'd be better served to Heiser into a big Juan Gonzalez
fan...
|
88.2291 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Thu Aug 17 1995 11:16 | 7 |
| >>Yanksme fans are talking like they got a 10 game lead for that wild card
>>spot, or something. I've suddenly Heisered into a big Ken Griffey Jr. fan.
>At this point you'd be better served to Heiser into a big Juan Gonzalez
>fan...
...unless of course you're Heisering on a series-by-series basis.
|
88.2292 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Thu Aug 17 1995 15:19 | 7 |
|
What a shame that the Skankmees bowed outta the race so early. Given
the 10 game lead, Roger will probably toss a 2 hitter tonight. If'n
the Skanks had closed to 2 or 3 games the line would be more like
2 1/3 innings 7 era 12 hits 4 bb 2 K's..........
mike
|
88.2293 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 17 1995 15:40 | 4 |
| Traditionally Roger has come up with a big game when the team needed it
most, not when the pressure was off.
George
|
88.2294 | Yeah right... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Thu Aug 17 1995 15:42 | 3 |
|
I'm not shaking my f#$%&^&ng head at you!!!
|
88.2295 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 17 1995 15:43 | 3 |
| Who you talk'en to?
George
|
88.2296 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Thu Aug 17 1995 15:43 | 3 |
|
That's right Clemens is Mr. September .....NOT..
|
88.2297 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Thu Aug 17 1995 15:45 | 3 |
|
Clemens talking to the Umpire in the playoffs???
|
88.2298 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 17 1995 15:50 | 4 |
| One game, big deal. What about the post season games he won (and should
have won) in '86?
George
|
88.2299 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Thu Aug 17 1995 15:53 | 10 |
|
Yeah 7th inning his coach asked him how he was. He said I want out.
Real pressure pitcher.
I think he was a great pitcher but I think he has had alot of bad
performances in big games.
Chap
|
88.2300 | Dave > Roger | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Thu Aug 17 1995 16:06 | 5 |
|
even though I hate em', I think my fondest memory of Roger is when he
blew the nine run lead he had against the Yankees........
mike
|
88.2301 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 17 1995 16:06 | 26 |
| RE<<< Note 88.2299 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs" >>>
> Yeah 7th inning his coach asked him how he was. He said I want out.
> Real pressure pitcher.
Funny, there's usually only one guy listening to a conversation between
a pitcher and a coach. Were you the guy wearing that funny cage like mask
listening in on that conversation? If not, then how would you know what
they talked about?
In any case I don't see anything wrong with a pitcher telling a coach that
he doesn't have his stuff, **IF** that's what happened.
> I think he was a great pitcher but I think he has had alot of bad
> performances in big games.
Like when? I seem to remember many times back when the Red Sox won 3 division
titles in 5 years that Clemens would break a 2 or 3 game losing streak by
coming up with a win. He was famous for doing that.
I believe he is 1-0 in two World Series starts and held his opponents to 2
runs over 7 innings in the game where he got no decision. And didn't he win one
of those last 3 must win games against the Angels in the '86 ALCS?
Seems he pitched well enough,
George
|
88.2302 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Thu Aug 17 1995 16:11 | 10 |
|
What was his record vs Oakland in the ALCS. Or better yet what was
his record vs Dave Stewart (a money pitcher).
I heard one of the Boston beat writers on Weeeeeiiiiooo that said
in 86 he wanted to come out in the 7th game with a lead. It seems to me
with the kind of competitor he has been he would want to stay in?
Chap
|
88.2303 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 17 1995 16:16 | 18 |
| RE<<< Note 88.2302 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs" >>>
> I heard one of the Boston beat writers on Weeeeeiiiiooo that said
> in 86 he wanted to come out in the 7th game with a lead. It seems to me
> with the kind of competitor he has been he would want to stay in?
Oh now there's a reliable source, the Boston Sports press.
Would these be the same guys that invented the controversy between Clemens
and Boggs the day the Sox clinched last place? That one was a classic.
As far as I can tell, no one has ever detected any relationship between
what Boston Sports columnists say and reality. They know their job is to
cater to the vein popping type of fan and they spoon up what ever will
sell papers or commercial slots, especially when it comes to trashing the
character of the players.
George
|
88.2304 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Thu Aug 17 1995 16:17 | 7 |
|
Well I'm just repeating what I heard. They are alot closer to the
action than you or I!
Chap
|
88.2305 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Aug 17 1995 16:22 | 7 |
| > I believe he is 1-0 in two World Series starts and held his opponents to 2
>runs over 7 innings in the game where he got no decision. And didn't he win one
>of those last 3 must win games against the Angels in the '86 ALCS?
He did pitch well in Game 6, but a true HoFer probably would have closed
that championship out. He didn't. And what about Game 2, when he and
Gooden were throwing BP ?
|
88.2306 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 17 1995 17:15 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2304 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs" >>>
> Well I'm just repeating what I heard. They are alot closer to the
> action than you or I!
If the job of sports columnists was to accurately report what transpired on
the field that would mean something, however it is not. The job of sports
columnists, for the most part, is to fan flames where ever they can and give
envious fans an excuse to hate eccentric players which in turn sells news
papers. And in Boston they take that job very seriously.
Yes there are a few guys like Ryan who also take some pride in their work and
guys like Gammons will sometimes report more objectively about non Boston teams
to build up their stature with the national press but these guys all know on
which side their bread is buttered
And saying "Slingshot McGrumpy wanted out of the game" will generate a lot
more heat than saying "Of course I don't know any more than you do what they
were talking about because being 100 feet from the mound in a noisy stadium is
the same as being 100 light years from the mound".
George
|
88.2307 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 17 1995 17:20 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2305 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>
>He did pitch well in Game 6, but a true HoFer probably would have closed
>that championship out. He didn't. And what about Game 2, when he and
>Gooden were throwing BP ?
Right or wrong the sad fact is that if Mookie had hit one of those foul tips
just a little bit better and popped it up, Clemens, Sheralldi, and Johnny Mac,
and Dave Henderson would have their likenesses cast in bronze down at Quincy
Market and would go down in history as legends of Boston Sports.
A pitcher can only do so much. He gave up 2 runs in 7 innings against one of
the best offensive teams to ever play the game, especially from the left side
of the plate, then the game was lost because of a 1 in 100 fluke.
George
|
88.2308 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Fri Aug 18 1995 09:22 | 15 |
|
Sorry George but I'm not buying it. Sure Writers make some fictious
reports but not all the time as you seem to be asserting. Why oh Why
would these writers who have bended over backwards time and time
again for his Highness suddenly turn on him? Don't see I believe
Chappy's right. The cuckoo clock wanted out in the 7th cause he
couldn't handle the pressure. I remember a playoff game against
Oakland where the TV folks got a nice interview with Dave Steward
and couldn't get within twenty feet of the Clock............
As for last night now he can't even pitch in no pressure situations
they should have traded him when they could have gotten something for
him...........
mike
|
88.2309 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Aug 18 1995 09:36 | 30 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2308 by CNTROL::CHILDS "Washing Machine" >>>
>Why oh Why
> would these writers who have bended over backwards time and time
> again for his Highness suddenly turn on him?
I think you are being a bit gullible. Do you actually think that these guys
give a flying rip about Clemens or anyone else that they cover?
In the late 80's when Clemens was winning and the fans were behind him
writing favorable reports was popular and sold news papers. Now that Clemens is
off his game there is a market for articles aimed at the type of fans that love
to hate ball players. If Clemens starts winning again the hero worship type
articles will be back because the market for them will be back.
Remember, news papers are in business to make money like the rest of us.
There is a staff of unknown (or hardly known) reporters organizing factual
stuff like box scores for those fans who are more interested in the game and
then there are the sports columnists who aim at the "radio call in" market
spooning up what ever those folks want to hear. Those are the guys in the
business of making this player a hero and that player a bumb depending on
what their readers want to hear.
No, I don't believe those guys. Maybe Clemens did ask to leave a game and
maybe he did not. And if he did, maybe he had a good reason and maybe he did
not. But one thing of which I am certain is that what a sports columnists
writes has a lot more to do with marketing than it does with what happens
during an actual game.
George
|
88.2310 | Selective memories? | CSLALL::BRULE | these ain't your Granpa's Red Sox | Fri Aug 18 1995 10:03 | 11 |
| Excuse me Mr. Chapalonis but Roger was quoted after the 86 season that
good old Johnny Mac thought Roger should be taken out in Game 6 and a
fresh Calvin "What's that squishy substance in my shorts" Schiraldi
and the gas brigade could close it out. You remember Johny "Let's leave
Buckner in for Defense and leave Stapleton on the bench" MacNamara.
People tend to forget the many August and September wins Clemens had
when the Sox were doing well in the late 80's. Or that he was the
winning pitcher in Game 7 of the ALCS in 86.
Mike
|
88.2311 | CLEMENS GET THE W LAST NIGHT? | WMOIS::BUCKLEY_M | | Fri Aug 18 1995 10:08 | 5 |
| Did Clemens get the win last night? Does anyone know how the sox
scored their runs?
Mike
|
88.2312 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Fri Aug 18 1995 10:15 | 8 |
|
Clemens didn't get the win, he left loosing 3-2 having blown a 2-0
lead.
George, the game we're talking about is from the 80's when the hero
worship was the thing............
mike
|
88.2313 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Aug 18 1995 10:20 | 6 |
| According to the Box Score in bb_rotis, Clemens went 7 innings, gave up 7
hits, 3 runs, walked 1 and struck out 7. The Sox won by scoring 1 run in the
9th. Gunderson who pitched 1/3 of an inning in the 8th got the win, Belinda the
save (Aggie's still suffering from tendenitis and is day to day).
George
|
88.2314 | | SALEM::DODA | No Alibis:Don'tGoThruLifeTryingToJustify | Fri Aug 18 1995 10:21 | 3 |
| They won despite some real questionable moves by Kennedy in the 8th and 9th.
daryll
|
88.2315 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Aug 18 1995 10:26 | 14 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2312 by CNTROL::CHILDS "Washing Machine" >>>
> George, the game we're talking about is from the 80's when the hero
> worship was the thing............
What difference does it make when the game took place? I believe someone
said the report was fairly recent.
If that was the case, why didn't this Columnists give this report back then?
Obviously it was because back in the 80's the market called for hero worship
articles about Clemens, today that market is calling for Clemen's head, and
the Boston Sports Columnists are in the business of feeding that market.
George
|
88.2316 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Aug 18 1995 10:55 | 2 |
| George, do you walk down the street constantly looking back over your
shoulder ?
|
88.2317 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Aug 18 1995 11:09 | 4 |
| Do you guys make bids when someone offers you a deal on an old but solid
bridge in New York?
George
|
88.2318 | Insomniac's account | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Fri Aug 18 1995 11:28 | 24 |
| 1. with first and third, one out, score tied, Nhaering up, 2-1 on the
count he sent O'Leary and on a freak play O' was out on a tag on the
head. Tim then struck out.
Montgomery question running ahead on the count and needing only one
run go for the sac. fly. KK thought he had a chance for two
and made his choice.
2. Top of ninth, McFarlane on and he pinch runs with Haselman his
other cather with no outs. Shill and Shanks wonder why he doesn't
pinch run McGee or Bell. Alicea who made the play of the game going to
his left to save the winning run earlier, forces H and then on
excellent baserunning goes all the way home on Tinsley hit over
Edmond's replacement in cf (Edmonds pulled a muscle hitting a homerun
off Clemens to put Cal. ahead).
I wonder a bit when McGee then comes in the game why a double
switch couldn't have been done. KK's reasoning seemed to be saving his
limited players for what might have been a long night and Alicea
instead of bunting was setup to try faking the bunt which resulted in
making moot the pinch-runner situation.
Haselman got down to second pretty good, perhaps he runs fairly
well anyway.
|
88.2319 | Compared to others I'll take the Globe | CSLALL::BRULE | these ain't your Granpa's Red Sox | Fri Aug 18 1995 11:35 | 10 |
| Say what you want about Boston writers but go and visit other cities
and see what kind of Sports coverage that other areas have. I've seen
papers in Orlando, The LA Times, New York, Albuquque, Vegas and Atlanta
and just about all of them with the exception of the New York Times you
can go thru their Sunday Sports section in about 5-10 minutes. The
Globe will take you about an hour. I haven't seen a midwest paper so I
don't know what they have. Vegas papers were the worse but seeing they
don't have any major teams that's to be expected. But the papers they
have there that are free and you can pick up at every corner are pretty
amusing.
|
88.2320 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Fri Aug 18 1995 12:04 | 6 |
| >I haven't seen a midwest paper...
Denver Post Friday sports section, 12 pages.
Marc
|
88.2321 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pick 'em up and strut | Mon Aug 21 1995 09:59 | 9 |
| I watched the end of the Sox-Mariners game yesterday.
I know /Don has been on vacation (I'd guess, haven't heard much from him) but
I couldn't help but think that Kevin Kennedy must've have some money on the
game and was trying not to beat the spread, with some of those pitching
decisions he made late....
8^)
|
88.2322 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Mon Aug 21 1995 12:45 | 17 |
|
Did anybody else catch the chat Gammons had with Clemens last night
on 'spn???
some choice comments:
"Even at 70% I'm as good as anybody in the league"
"I'm making good out pitches but when I get squeezed and have
to throw it over the middle, well anybody can hit a fastball
down the middle of the plate"
"I hate taking all these antibotics"
hahaha same old Roger same old excuses..........
mike
|
88.2323 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NUMBER 3 LOOMS OVER FENWAY | Mon Aug 21 1995 12:49 | 4 |
|
Nice to see he's still humble???
|
88.2324 | GONG X 11 | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Aug 21 1995 17:10 | 1 |
88.2325 | where's Seles? | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Aug 24 1995 14:03 | 10 |
88.2326 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Thu Aug 24 1995 14:36 | 10 |
| Mike, Sele's pretty much done for the year. In his last warmup stint
in Pawtucket Monday night, he had to leave the game in the 2nd inning
with shoulder stiffness. He'll be undergoing an MRI shortly.
The rotation looks pretty strong still without him. Wakefield and
Clemens, along with Hanson and Cormier, have all been pretty solid this
year. Zane Smith is scheduled to get a start this weekend and Vaughn
Eshelman has done surprisingly well.
Steve
|
88.2327 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Aug 24 1995 14:53 | 8 |
| Given the dependence on the umpire perhaps a decision on starter would
follow the announcement of the umpire - Clemens may like an ump that is
difficult for Wakefield and vv.
Wakefield's problem isn't "squeezing" but in the ability of the ump to
follow is pitches (extreme drop). Clemens simply seems to need the
extra inch some umps will give him and now seems psychologically in
need of it.
|
88.2328 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Aug 24 1995 14:56 | 34 |
|
> The Canseco-Vaughn duo this year has to be one of the best in the
> league.
Interesting idea.
OK, let's see...
Canseco - .388 OBP, .569 SLG
Vaughn - .389 OBP, .569 SLG
And for comparison...
Baltimore: Baines - .402 OBP, .555 SLG; Palmiero - .362 OBP, .561 SLG
California: Salmon - .440 OBP, .611 SLG; Davis - .453 OBP, .548 SLG
Chicago: Thomas - .481 OBP, .657 SLG; Ventura - .383 OBP, .516 SLG
Cleveland: Ramirez - .425 OBP, .626 SLG; Thome - .454 OBP, .574 SLG
Detroit: Curtis - .359 OBP, .460 SLG; Fielder - .357 OBP, .501 SLG
Kansas City: Joyner - .387 OBP, .418 SLG; Gaetti - .349 OBP, .557 SLG
Milwaukee: Surhoff - .404 OBP, .528 SLG; Jaha - .377 OBP, .586 SLG
Minnesota: Knoblauch - .416 OBP, .475 SLG; Puckett - .369 OBP, .508 SLG
New York: O'Neill - .398 OBP, .539 SLG; Stanley - .370 OBP, .513 SLG
Oakland: McGwire - .439 OBP, .661 SLG; Henderson - .404 OBP, .434 SLG
Seattle: Martinez - .496 OBP, .639 SLG; Martinez - .368 OBP, .563 SLG
Texas: Clark - .396 OBP, .508 SLG; Tettleton - .391 OBP, .482 SLG
Toronto: Alomar - .375 OBP, .479 SLG; Sprague - .348 OBP, .471 SLG
OK, I'd say, purely based upon offensive performance, Boston's best
duo ranks 6th, clearly behing California, Chicago, Cleveland, Oakland,
and Seattle, and about on par with Milwaukee. They're no worse than
7th, though, so "among the best" is, at least in a general sense,
correct.
Joe
|
88.2329 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pick 'em up and strut | Thu Aug 24 1995 15:14 | 7 |
| Did I hear correctly the other evening that Sele was or could be, or might have
been, suspended in Triple A for hitting a batsman?
I was only half paying attention, so I might be all wet....
'Saw
|
88.2330 | Hopefully, it's nothing serious | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Thu Aug 24 1995 15:27 | 7 |
| Ya, Saw, he got taken deep 3 times or so in a couple of innings, then
proceeded to plunk someone and got the heave. He served his
suspension, then took himself out of the game the other night. This
will be one of his more memorable years, I imagine. Memorable, as in,
"let's hope he never experiences this again."
Steve
|
88.2331 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Aug 24 1995 15:38 | 3 |
88.2332 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pick 'em up and strut | Thu Aug 24 1995 15:47 | 20 |
| > Ya, Saw, he got taken deep 3 times or so in a couple of innings, then
> proceeded to plunk someone and got the heave. He served his
> suspension, then took himself out of the game the other night. This
> will be one of his more memorable years, I imagine. Memorable, as in,
> "let's hope he never experiences this again."
I can't help but wonder if the ump was trying to make a name for himself.
What guy in his right mind, who's down in the minors on rehab, would purposely
plunk a batter.
I just can't see it. Not that it wouldn't happen mind you, but I think you
really have to go "hmmmm" when it comes to Seles intent in this instance.
'Saw
|
88.2333 | Is the magic number 20? | FABSIX::E_MAXWELL | Oh flight attendent! | Fri Aug 25 1995 04:27 | 10 |
| Sox just keep rolling along....
Boston 13, OAKLAND 6
Hanson picks up the win (13)
Boston has won 19 of its last 21 games and owns a season-high
15 1/2-game lead in the AL East.
Lil Ed
|
88.2334 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Aug 25 1995 09:40 | 19 |
|
> Joe, do you have stats for Bonds-Williams from last year?
Not quite final stats, but close enough (minus a game or two):
Bonds: .652 SLG, .421 OBP
Williams: .607 SLG, .321 OBP
A better choice last year would have been Belle/Lofton:
Belle: .725 SLG, .439 OBP
Lofton: .533 SLG, .412 OBP
Or Thomas/Franco:
Thomas: .747 SLG, .496 OBP
Franco: .508 SLG, .400 OBP
Joe
|
88.2335 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pick 'em up and strut | Fri Aug 25 1995 09:49 | 3 |
| Man, did anyone else see those homers?
Booming towering shots -- taters all!
|
88.2336 | Time he got some recognition | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Aug 25 1995 10:17 | 6 |
| I don't know if anyone else in the country has noticed it, but John
Valentin has definitely made the next step, and has to be considered the
most dangerous hitting shortstop in baseball. The boy can hit! He's
not too shabby in the field either.
Steve
|
88.2337 | | CSLALL::BRULE | these ain't your Granpa's Red Sox | Fri Aug 25 1995 10:45 | 1 |
| I think a SS named Barry Larkin might have a say about that.
|
88.2338 | Joe Huber, any help here? | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Aug 25 1995 10:54 | 4 |
| What are their numbers, Mike? I know Larkin is currently "best in
class" but I'd still like to see their offensive numbers.
Steve
|
88.2339 | Stats | CSLALL::BRULE | these ain't your Granpa's Red Sox | Fri Aug 25 1995 11:46 | 14 |
| I put a bunch of SS off the top of my head in this comparison.
Valentin compares very nicely with all of them. Dunston is quietly
having a nice year.
G AB R H TB D T HR RBI SB CS E BA SLG
Barry Larkin 97 368 78 120 187 21 5 12 56 37 4 7 .326 .508
Shawon Dunston 95 349 44 112 186 26 6 12 53 5 3 12 .321 .533
Jose Offerman 103 388 63 114 151 13 6 4 31 2 7 28 .294 .389
Wil Cordero 102 407 52 123 178 30 2 7 40 9 5 15 .302 .437
Cal Ripken 106 408 47 106 171 25 2 12 59 0 1 7 .260 .419
John Valentin 99 383 81 110 202 25 2 21 70 14 4 15 .287 .527
Gary DiSarcina 88 328 56 104 155 26 5 5 41 6 3 5 .317 .473
Omar Vizquel 104 425 67 112 143 19 0 4 39 23 9 7 .264 .336
|
88.2340 | Yes, the West Coast is also in the American League | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944 | Fri Aug 25 1995 11:46 | 7 |
| And while you're at it, Joe, look up Gary DiSarcina of the Angels, now
unfortunately sidelined with torn thumb ligaments, who has also come
into his own offensively this season. And whose defense, based on
optical impressions (don't have the range data handy), is superior to
Valentin's.
Steve
|
88.2341 | | CSLALL::BRULE | these ain't your Granpa's Red Sox | Fri Aug 25 1995 11:49 | 2 |
| Those stats I put in were thru last Sunday
|
88.2342 | Don't see any offensive comparison myself | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Fri Aug 25 1995 12:00 | 9 |
| I'd have to give John Valentin serious consideration for mvp with the
numbers and the postition he plays on a team with BoSox record.
Averages are nice but you have to give weight to just getting out there
day in and day out and doing it and that 200+ tb mark is impressive
along with hrs and rbis and runs.
obp and slugging are nice indicators as are runs scored but I'll stick
to the old basics myself.
|
88.2343 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | This is year 77 in the Sox 100 year rebuilding plan | Fri Aug 25 1995 12:13 | 2 |
88.2344 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Aug 25 1995 12:23 | 29 |
|
> -< Joe Huber, any help here? >-
Sure...
John Valentin: .392 OBP, .526 SLG
Gary DiSarcina: .355 OBP, .473 SLG
Barry Larkin: .397 OBP, .496 SLG
Shawon Dunston: .337 OBP, .529 SLG
DiSarcina's year (what there was of it) was a fluke; he's not
really that good. And Dunston's not in the same class as Larkin;
he gets on base _few_ too infrequently.
Larkin vs. Valentin's tough - right now, though, I'd have to give
the edge to Valentin, in large part due to his fielding advantage
(Valentin's still at the top of his form, and well, well above
average; Larkin, once one of the best, has been merely above average
for three straight years now).
Of the others in .2339, Cordero's for the best shot as deserving
consideration in the future; even better choices, though, would
be Rodriguez (Pinella's an _idiot_ for not playing him now, given
the Mariner's self professed goal of making the playoffs) and
Jeter.
Joe
|
88.2345 | I didn't see it | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Aug 25 1995 13:01 | 1 |
88.2346 | "All-Star" John Valentin is ok with me... | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Aug 25 1995 13:39 | 9 |
| Yup, he cranked one about 420' or so, admired if for a couple of
heartbeats, and did what is becoming his daily lap. He's been on a
tear for the past month or so, as has Mo Vaughn.
Thanks for the numbers, Joe. Paul, he may not be MVP material, but he
certainly has put to rest the "John Valentin knock" you layed on
us daily, while he was slumping after getting beaned...
Steve
|
88.2347 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Aug 25 1995 13:54 | 5 |
|
Actually, both Larkin & Valentin would be among my 10 picks/league,
if I had them...
Joe
|
88.2348 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | This is year 77 in the Sox 100 year rebuilding plan | Fri Aug 25 1995 14:01 | 5 |
88.2349 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Aug 25 1995 15:15 | 23 |
|
Argument? I thought I just stated it; I hadn't gotten around to
arguing it yet... B^)
Well, let's see...
John Valentin - '94, .405 OBP, .514 SLG; '95, .392 OBP, .526 SLG
Gary DiSarcina - '94, .290 OBP, .325 SLG; '95, .355 OBP, .473 SLG
Barry Larkin - '94, .370 OBP, .424 SLG; '95, .397 OBP, .496 SLG
Shawon Dunston - '94, .322 OBP, .450 SLG; '95, .337 OBP, .529 SLG
Going back a bit further, using equivalent averages (a number
similar to batting average, which ties together all offensive
production _and_ normalizes for league and park differences):
Valentin (92-95): .314, .274, .306, .301
DiSarcina : .215, .202, .209, .286
Larkin : .317, .301, .289, .315
Dunston : .273, .339, .262, .310 (Note - limited AB in 92, 93)
I think it's safe to say the Valentin's season _isn't_ a fluke.
Joe
|
88.2350 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Wed Aug 30 1995 11:20 | 6 |
| Anyone know who's pitching for the Sox tonight? I just scored some tix.
Damn, looks like I'll have to leave work early. I hate when that happens!
billl
|
88.2351 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Wed Aug 30 1995 11:26 | 2 |
|
I heard Hanson.......
|
88.2352 | | CAMONE::WAY | Pick 'em up and strut | Wed Aug 30 1995 11:30 | 15 |
| Leaving work EARLY?
Where's your loyalty to this company, who (under)pays you so that you can
feed your wife and kids?
Where's your loyalty to this company that condescends to provide you a place
to work your ass off for them?
I'm surprised at you Bill!
(Have a beer for me 8^))
'Saw
|
88.2353 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Thu Aug 31 1995 11:57 | 20 |
| Got to see a good one last night.
After waiting entirly tooooo long to give Hansen the 'hook', Kennedy
did a great job of getting the right pitcher on the mound for the
given situation. The bullpen performed with precision.
Two things stuck out like sore thumbs, though. The first was the
ineptness of Willie 'a-face-only-a-mother-could-love' McGee to
swing a bat. Pittiful! The second was the sub-par outfield play
by O'Leary and to a lesser degree Greenwell. I could excuse O'Leary's
misjudging fly balls due to this being his firsted year in Fenway.
Greenwell, on the other hand, has no excuse for his misplaying balls
off the Green Monster.
Matt Stairs pulled through in the clutch. I'm really beginning to like
this kid.
billl
|
88.2354 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill! | Thu Aug 31 1995 12:11 | 16 |
|
>> Greenwell, on the other hand, has no excuse for his misplaying
>> balls off the Green Monster.
I think you have it backwards, billl. The ball that caromed off
the wall past Greenwell wasn't his fault. It took a wild bounce
that no one could have predicted. Fly balls may be an adventure
for Mike but he plays the Wall as well as anyone I've seen in
30 years of watching the Sox. As for O'Leary, he has no excuse.
Being new to any park has little to do with completely misjudging
a fly ball. As for Stairs, that was absolutely perfect. The guys
on NESN just got done saying that he hadn't done much in Pawtuck-
ett to warrant being brought up but Duquette and Kennedy like
him and them bang! he gets a very clutch hit coming in cold.
|
88.2355 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Aug 31 1995 12:18 | 5 |
| > he plays the Wall as well as anyone I've seen in 30 years
It seems comments like this have been attributed to Rice and Yaz too,
and will probably be used for the next Boston LFer (if there is a Fenway
Park then).
|
88.2356 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Thu Aug 31 1995 12:43 | 8 |
| >> he plays the Wall as well as anyone I've seen in 30 years
>It seems comments like this have been attributed to Rice and Yaz too,
>and will probably be used for the next Boston LFer (if there is a Fenway
>Park then).
Well, they're completely appropriate if they all play the Wall equally well...
:-)
|
88.2357 | | CAMONE::WAY | We aim by P.F.M | Thu Aug 31 1995 12:58 | 18 |
| We all know that playing the Wall (and LF in general) in Fenway is an
acquired skill.
Williams was there before Yaz, and since then, the LFers have done a fine
job.
I never saw Williams play there. But I did see Yaz and Yaz was a master.
No doubt about it.
Rice was good (not quite as good as Yaz, IMO) but a notch better than
Greenwell.
I've watched Greenwell a lot lately, and he does play LF pretty well.
My only concern with him at this point is his propensity to collide with
the wall. Careers can end early that way...
'Saw
|
88.2358 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Thu Aug 31 1995 14:26 | 9 |
| I really hate to disagree with you, Tommy, but from my vantage point,
which admittedly did not include slo-mo instant replay, he badly misplayed
a shot that came staight back off the wall.
Maybe the shot on NESN showed it differently, but I think he flat misplayed it.
billl
|
88.2359 | Williams was very clever out in left | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Aug 31 1995 14:52 | 9 |
| Ted of all of them probably had the best "touch" off the wall, Yaz got
awful good and Greenwell is excellent from the little I get watch him
at Fenway. Rice potentially and occastionally was the best of the
three since he had all the tools (speed,arm,judgement). He wasn't 100%
into 100% of the time, imo.
I don't know if anybody did all the little tricks before Williams, the
feint with the flyball and quick turn etc; Yaz learned them all and
then some. Lewis played there when there was a hill (Duffy's cliff).
|
88.2360 | Its not like he's a gold glover or anything | AD::HEATH | New England Patriots 1996 Super Bowl Champs | Thu Aug 31 1995 16:00 | 7 |
|
I have to agree with Billl. To me it looked like the ball actually
went behind him. Going to his left he appeared to overun it. I'm not
saying he should have caught it but it looked to me like a mental boot.
Jerry
|
88.2361 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Thu Aug 31 1995 17:01 | 10 |
| In his defense, though, he did try the 'feigned fly ball catch' trick
then quickly turned only to find himself out of position to catch the
ball off the wall.
Maybe he should have passed on that last round of beers the night before.
It does tend to make you dizzy the nexted day, or so I've heard.
billl
|
88.2362 | ex | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill! | Thu Aug 31 1995 17:06 | 3 |
|
The NESN announces said it appeared to hit a seam and that's
the way it looked to me. It certainly didn't come off straight.
|
88.2363 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Thu Aug 31 1995 17:26 | 7 |
| Like I said, you had a slo-mo up close repay of the play. I was looking
at it full speed and live. If you say it didn't come back staight, I'll
have to take your word for it, but it sure looked differently from section
26 row 2.
billl
|
88.2364 | | CAMONE::WAY | We aim by P.F.M | Thu Aug 31 1995 17:28 | 5 |
| Billl,
How many beers had you had?
I mean, as long as we're unturning all the stones....8^)
|
88.2365 | | SALEM::DODA | Ask me about my vow of silence | Thu Aug 31 1995 18:15 | 7 |
| Billll,
I was out getting my hair cut and missed that play.
Thanks for the detail...
daryll
|
88.2366 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 08 1995 09:25 | 8 |
| It appears that Clemens has gotten back on track. Since being 4 and 4 he
seems to have won 4 or 5 games in a row. He's got about 1 strike out per inning
which is really good and he's walking less than half that.
Too bad Sele is out but having Clemens back in form puts the Soxs in good
shape for the playoffs.
George
|
88.2367 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Fri Sep 08 1995 10:14 | 5 |
|
what do expect George they're meaningless games. Wait till the pressure
is on..........
mike
|
88.2368 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 08 1995 11:23 | 5 |
| Didn't he win one last week after the team had lost a couple games in a row?
Nipped another BoSox skid in the bud.
George
|
88.2369 | but who really cares anyway | MSE1::PCOTE | No GUI, No Glory | Fri Sep 08 1995 14:16 | 14 |
|
Could someone provide the details of the infamous Red Sox choke
back in 78' (I think). They were up big on the Yankees in Sept.
(something like 12ish games) with only like 16ish remaining games.
I certainly don't recall it but I wanted to get the correct
numbers.
I can't wait for the big choke of 95! And I know they won't
disappoint.
Paul (who will never ride the bandwagon again)
|
88.2370 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Sep 08 1995 14:41 | 6 |
| re: -1 HELLO! Things didn't quite happen the way you remember. The
Sox were up big (14 games?) in late July and actually dropped into 2nd
place by about 3 games in September. They then went on to win about 8
games in a row to even it up. Then came a Mike Torrez meatball.
Steve
|
88.2371 | Nothin' like reliving those painful times.... | CAMONE::WAY | We aim by P.F.M | Fri Sep 08 1995 14:45 | 16 |
| I love to relive the time I dug a bullet of my arm with a dull butter knife
and had to pour pee on the wound to disinfect it.
Then I like to relive the time that I got this massive cut in my leg and
stitched it up with a twig and bits of string that I stole from a birds nest.
Oh yeah, I can't forget the time I had that tooth drilled when the dentist
was out of novocaine.
And I'll never forget the time that I crush my leg in a fall from a cliff, and
I had to amputate it with my Swiss army knife, after which I built a big
fire and used a burning log to cauterize the stump....
Those are some great memories....
|
88.2373 | Or maybe the 9th inning of 75 WS game 7 | CSLALL::BRULE | you killed freakin Larry! | Fri Sep 08 1995 14:55 | 3 |
| While we're at it could someone give me the pitch by pitch breakdown of
the 10th inning of game 6 of the World Series. You can shorten it up by
starting after the second out was made.
|
88.2374 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 08 1995 15:29 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2370 by PCBUOA::MORGAN >>>
> re: -1 HELLO! Things didn't quite happen the way you remember. The
> Sox were up big (14 games?) in late July and actually dropped into 2nd
> place by about 3 games in September. They then went on to win about 8
> games in a row to even it up. Then came a Mike Torrez meatball.
>
> Steve
This is about the way I remember it as well except that as I believe the 14
games was the lead the Red Sox had over the 3rd place Yankees who eventually
won. At the time of the BoSox largest lead the Orioles were about half way
between them at about 7 games out. I don't think the BoSox ever had a double
digit lead over the 2nd place club that year.
George
|
88.2375 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Pats trounce Browns in high school stadium | Fri Sep 08 1995 15:56 | 7 |
88.2376 | $8 for a skybox seat for the last game of the season! | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | NBA action - it's nonexistant | Fri Sep 08 1995 16:03 | 9 |
| Red Sox were up 14 1/2 games on July 28. Then began the nosedive that
culminated with a humiliating four game sweep by the Yankees. Sox fell
to 2 1/2 back, but won their last eight games to force the playoff.
Eckersley, Tiant, and Lee were immense down the stretch. Stanley
was unhittable out of the pen.
Then Zimmer picks Torrez to start the playoff game. You know the rest.
NAZZ
|
88.2377 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Sep 08 1995 16:05 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2376 by TNPUBS::NAZZARO "NBA action - it's nonexistant" >>>
> Red Sox were up 14 1/2 games on July 28.
Yes, but up 14.5 over the 2nd place team or up 14.5 over the Yankees?
I thought it was up 7 over the 2nd place O's and up 14.5 over the Yankees.
Maybe not, it was a long time ago.
George
|
88.2378 | Old age sucks! | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | NBA action - it's nonexistant | Fri Sep 08 1995 16:13 | 4 |
| I don't remember either. All I remember is the date and the 14 1/2
games. I even forgot the Yankees weren't in 2nd place!
NAZZ
|
88.2379 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Sep 08 1995 16:18 | 30 |
| I don't think Balt had 7 1/2 games on the Yanks in July...maybe, but I
don't think so.
Also, I believe the Yanks had it down to 9 1/2 or 7 1/2 by Sept 1, so
it wasn't a miracle rush, as some believe. As Nazz pointed out, the
4-game sweep in Boston was the killer. But that was followed by the
Yanks getting 2 of 3 in NY the next weekend. Boston left NYC 3 1/2
games behind in the middle of Sept. That they could get off the deck
and win their last 8 games to tie the Yanks was remarkable (and always
forgotten).
I'm surprised no one has mentioned RICK WISE !!! (that scum-sucking
pig) Cleveland, and their starter Rick Wise, beat the Yanks on the
last day of the regular season. I believe the score was 6-2. The
Fenway Park scoreboard read: "Thank You Rick Wise" (so I'm told).
After the one-game playoff, George Steinbrenner (aka "The Idiot")
was quoted as saying, "these are the two best teams in baseball".
The Boston Globe had a cartoon in the next day's paper. A big,
fat-faced Don Zimmer, a wad of chew in his mouth, spewing the
words:
"DAMN YANKEES !"
I've got a copy of the sketch (provided by the Globe cartoonist
that did it) at home. A Yankees souvenir magazine sold a bronze
placque of it a few years later. I never ordered it, and have
regretted it ever since. If anyone knows where I can get one,
I'd appreciate it !
|
88.2380 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Sep 08 1995 16:36 | 27 |
|
> I don't think Balt had 7 1/2 games on the Yanks in July...maybe, but I
> don't think so.
I agree. I think the largest Sox lead over the 2nd-place team was
still a good 12-13 games.
> Also, I believe the Yanks had it down to 9 1/2 or 7 1/2 by Sept 1, so
> it wasn't a miracle rush, as some believe.
The Boston Massacre was Labor Day weekend, wasn't it? That closed
the lead to almost nil. The major ground was lost in late July-
August (still pretty damn miraculous, though-- *no one* loses a
14-game lead, from almost any point in a season onward).
> I'm surprised no one has mentioned RICK WISE !!! (that scum-sucking
> pig) Cleveland, and their starter Rick Wise, beat the Yanks on the
> last day of the regular season. I believe the score was 6-2. The
> Fenway Park scoreboard read: "Thank You Rick Wise" (so I'm told).
It wasn't Rick Wise, it was Rick Waits. Wise was the sometimes
spectacular, sometimes horrible Red Sox RHP who'd been dumped before
1978. Waits beat Tiant in that game, no less. I'd never heard about
the scoreboard, though.
glenn
|
88.2381 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Sep 08 1995 16:41 | 5 |
| You sure it was Rick Wise, Joe? I seem to remember it being a lefty
who's name I can't remember for the life of me right now. Or was that
at the conclusion of yet ANOTHER year of heartbreak!?
Steve
|
88.2382 | BANG! Thanks, Glenn... | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Sep 08 1995 16:42 | 1 |
|
|
88.2383 | time faded my poor recollection | MSE1::PCOTE | No GUI, No Glory | Fri Sep 08 1995 17:18 | 3 |
|
rep.-many thanks for setting the record straight.
|
88.2385 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Sox swept by Yankees again! | Mon Sep 11 1995 08:10 | 2 |
88.2386 | Anything like a "GONG"? | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Mon Sep 11 1995 09:04 | 3 |
| Paul, what's a "dong"?
Steve
|
88.2387 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NUMBER 3 LOOMS OVER FENWAY | Mon Sep 11 1995 10:05 | 12 |
|
S ox
W ill be
E liminated
E arly in the
P layoffs
Chap
|
88.2388 | :-) | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Mon Sep 11 1995 10:51 | 9 |
| > S ox
> W ill be
> E liminated
> E arly in the
> P layoffs
...while the Yankees watch from their off-season vacation homes.
Sorry, I'm too tired to come up with as good an acronym... :-)
|
88.2389 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Wed Sep 13 1995 09:08 | 4 |
|
anybody nervous yet???????????????
;^)
|
88.2390 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 13 1995 09:19 | 13 |
| One problem with Cinderella teams is that any time you hear bonging noises
you've got to check to see if you're surrounded by mice and pumpkins. These
last few days the team has been pitching the way people thought those guys
would pitch before the season started.
Still with 18 games to go the Yankees would have to play better than .777 and
the Sox worse than .222 for the Sox not to win the division. Better they should
have their slump now than in October.
I'm just hope'en that Clemens finds his glass spikes before the big dance
begins.
George
|
88.2391 | Ba dump!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | S W E E P !!!!! | Wed Sep 13 1995 09:55 | 10 |
|
Panic Button.
-------
| |
-------------
Guys step away. Don't push it guys.
Put your hands up where I can see them!
|
88.2392 | but the sox lead is still plentifull | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Wed Sep 13 1995 10:18 | 6 |
|
well the Yanks have been playing 1.000 ball and the sox .000 over
the past week.....so anything is possible...
|
88.2393 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 13 1995 10:37 | 11 |
| Yes, but you have to drop the curtain in the right place for those numbers to
hold up. Go back a few more days and it looks quite different.
Baseball has many streaks over the short term but seems to creep back towards
.500 over the long term and the BoSox finish out with a reasonable easy home
stand.
And of course the other question is, are the Yankees really going to sweep
Cleveland? Now that would be an omen for the playoffs.
George
|
88.2394 | About two weeks left to get straightened out... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 13 1995 10:53 | 11 |
|
> well the Yanks have been playing 1.000 ball and the sox .000 over
> the past week.....so anything is possible...
It ain't gonna happen. The division race is over. However, it
_will_ bother me if the Sox are still playing this kind of lousy
baseball come October 1. Fortunately, it's still not even
September 15...
glenn
|
88.2395 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 13 1995 11:03 | 6 |
|
... but you know suddenly there is the real possibility that the Sox will
Clinch at home.
Joy in Mudville
George
|
88.2396 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Sep 13 1995 12:44 | 7 |
| >Now that would be an omen for the playoffs.
That's where the concern should be. I'm surprised that anyone is talking
about the current slump in the context of the division race. The only
concern should be over whether they can turn it around in 3 weeks.
And the "Cinderella" analogy is perfect (excluding Vaughn).
|
88.2397 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 13 1995 13:23 | 9 |
| Well there again a good number of people would be happy to see the BoSox just
make the playoffs. With Dan Duquette calling the shots, the younger players
doing well and both Pawtucket and Trenton near the top of their divisions, the
future for the BoSox looks good.
Or to put it another way, over the next few years it should be a lot more
fun being a BoSox or Patriots fan than being a Celtics fan.
George
|
88.2398 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Sep 13 1995 13:28 | 14 |
| > Or to put it another way, over the next few years it should be a lot more
>fun being a BoSox or Patriots fan than being a Celtics fan.
I don't know about that, George. Dominique is gone... :-)
Big Mo as of this morning: .298, 37 HR, 114 RBI
Earlier this year, someone (a Yankee fan? Chappy? don't know for sure...)
said that Mo wasn't really a proven power hitter because he'd never hit 30
in a season (semantically correct because of his 29 in 112 or so games last
year). Well, is he now?
I didn't know this, but he's struck out 130+ times. These are Rob Deer/Cecil
Fielder numbers. It's really tough to hit around .300 that way.
|
88.2399 | not necessarily | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Wed Sep 13 1995 13:30 | 8 |
|
Don't see how George. Pats and Soxs' fans will suffer from unfufilled
promise and the general bore of the games themselves. Celts' fans on
the other hand enjoy a more fast paced enjoyable game where every
victory is to be cherished. Winning titles is great but I never had
more fun as a Celtics' fan than I did in 78 and 79......
mike
|
88.2401 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 13 1995 13:38 | 12 |
| When you look at the players the BoSox are playing with and what they've done
with guys who no one had ever heard of last year I find it hard to see where
winning the division is not a major accomplishment.
Now over the next few years I expect bigger things. I expect that for the
last half of this decade they should be a team like the Braves always making
the playoffs, I just hope that unlike the Braves (for the last few years
anyway) they manage to put one over the top.
My prediction, the jinx will be broken before the century is over.
George
|
88.2402 | | CAMONE::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Wed Sep 13 1995 13:44 | 14 |
| > When you look at the players the BoSox are playing with and what they've done
>with guys who no one had ever heard of last year I find it hard to see where
>winning the division is not a major accomplishment.
We didn't say it wasn't a major accomplishment. We said it wasn't enough.
Kind of like getting a date with [insert name of favorite movie star] wouldn't
quite be enough. It would be a major accomplishment, however.
'Saw
|
88.2403 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 13 1995 13:53 | 9 |
| If I felt they had an old team and had already traded away the future for
one last chance I'd agree but I think the secret here is patience. There's
every reason to believe that with the young players they have and Duquette in
control things will get better before they get worse.
It wouldn't be enough if they never win but it would be enough if they won
in the '97 to '99 time frame which is when I feel they will be at their peak.
George
|
88.2404 | insert: Elle Macpherson | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Wed Sep 13 1995 14:03 | 1 |
|
|
88.2405 | But then again we had '74 vs O's, another labor day massacre | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Sep 13 1995 14:10 | 6 |
| The second place team in '78 was Milwaukee and the lead max'ed at 10
1/2 with yanks at 13.5/14 - that was still July I think.
Except it stayed way up there until late August and disappeared
overnight. I think Oakland came into Fenway and took three to start
the slide.
|
88.2406 | Don't even say it, Chappy... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 13 1995 14:32 | 7 |
|
> -< insert: Elle Macpherson >-
Oh, I don't know, I think that might be "enough"...
glenn
|
88.2407 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Sep 13 1995 17:16 | 1 |
88.2408 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Sep 13 1995 17:45 | 15 |
| > Now over the next few years I expect bigger things. I expect that for the
>last half of this decade they should be a team like the Braves always making
>the playoffs, I just hope that unlike the Braves (for the last few years
>anyway) they manage to put one over the top.
That's where you'll get yourself into trouble George. Insert "hope" for
"expect" and you'll save yourself a lot of frustration. While this group
has been great, they're still primarily unknowns. Will they repeat their
individual performances next year ?
RE: Mo Vaughn
If Mattingly does leave NY, Vaughn would be my TOP FA target this off-season
if I were The Stick. Given his roots are in the NYC area, it can be done !
|
88.2409 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 13 1995 18:00 | 19 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2408 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>
>That's where you'll get yourself into trouble George. Insert "hope" for
>"expect" and you'll save yourself a lot of frustration. While this group
>has been great, they're still primarily unknowns. Will they repeat their
>individual performances next year ?
No, of course not but I still expect things to get better for two reasons.
First, Dan Duquette seems to have been the guy responsible for building what
U.S.A. Today Baseball Weekly termed the best minor league organization in the
National League when he was up in Montreal.
Second, it appears he's already doing that here since both AAA Pawtucket
and AA Trenton finished at or near the top of their respective divisions.
I feel good about the BoSox's future.
George
|
88.2410 | Magic number......6! | FABSIX::E_MAXWELL | N.E. Patriots...Bound for glory. | Thu Sep 14 1995 06:09 | 10 |
| Wakefield becomes the second 16 game winner in the A.L.
Sox shut out O's 2-0 and the yankmes get shut out by the tribe 5-0.
Hosey hits lead off solo shot in the first and that's all Wakefield
needed as he allowed just 2 hits in 8.1 innings of work. Ags gets
( 28th ? ) save. Glad to see the slide is over!
Go BOSOX!
Lil Ed
|
88.2411 | | CAMONE::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Sep 14 1995 09:34 | 4 |
| Norwalk CT *ain't* Noo Yawk. Tain't exactly north of the Gold Coast, where all
the real CT folks live, but it sure as hell ain't Noo Yawk.....
Noo Yawk roots indeed.....;^)
|
88.2412 | time will tell | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Thu Sep 14 1995 10:14 | 9 |
|
but he went to College in Jersey about 30 minutes outside the
city...
If they don't get him, they may at least drive the price very high
for the sox.....Mo has been quoted several times saying he wouldn't
mind playing in NY....
|
88.2413 | Correction | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | NBA action - it's nonexistant | Thu Sep 14 1995 10:42 | 3 |
| PAwSox finished under .500 and out of the AAA playoffs.
NAZZ
|
88.2414 | geography the Mr T way... | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Thu Sep 14 1995 10:47 | 6 |
| Hail, saw, everyone knows everything from south of the Mass border to the
southern tip of New Jersy, including Philly, is just a suburb of New Yuck!
billl
|
88.2415 | | CAMONE::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Sep 14 1995 11:09 | 7 |
| On a serious note, regarding the Geography....
You can start to see a little bit of Noo Yawk influence in New Haven's night
life, but much farther north than that, and there isn't any....
|
88.2416 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 14 1995 11:35 | 12 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2413 by TNPUBS::NAZZARO "NBA action - it's nonexistant" >>>
> PAwSox finished under .500 and out of the AAA playoffs.
Did they slide near the end? With about a week or so to go they were only
1/2 game out of 1st place in their division.
If that's the case I wouldn't worry a lot about a short losing streak. That
happens in the minors as people move up and down. The important thing is that
most of the 2nd half of the season they were in contention for their division.
George
|
88.2417 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Thu Sep 14 1995 11:39 | 7 |
|
Speaking of minor league teams, I believe that the average finish for
all the Rockies A, AA, and AAA teams was second place. This includes
the AAA Sky Sox which are 1 game away from champions.
Marc
|
88.2418 | Rockies have great talent in their system | MARIN::DODGE | | Thu Sep 14 1995 17:00 | 9 |
| The AA New Haven Ravens (Rockies) won the Northern Division beating the
Portland Seadogs, and took the championship series to the final game
before losing.
Paul Zuvella, the Ravens coach, will spend next year as an interim
coach with the Rockies. He is coming home tonight and a big party is
planned. he lives next door to me in San Ramon, Ca.
Don
|
88.2419 | Magic number.......4 | FABSIX::E_MAXWELL | N.E. Patriots...Bound for glory. | Sat Sep 16 1995 01:21 | 10 |
| Boston at 6 Final
Cleveland 3
NY Yankees at 1 Final
Baltimore 8
Sox could clinch sunday. Belle hit homeruns #'s 38 + 39.
Mo hit # 38.
|
88.2420 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 20 1995 11:16 | 8 |
|
Red Sox are now listed at 4-1 odds in Las Vegas to win the World
Series. Those odds (20% chance) are way, way too short, and clearly
represent the misguided hopes and dreams of a very strong national
following of Sox fans...
glenn
|
88.2421 | the thick plottens... | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Wed Sep 20 1995 11:20 | 7 |
| Does anyone have a 'clear' picture of the new and 'improved'
playoff format? Is it a 5 game or seven game series?
If a five gamer, is it 2-2-1 or 3-2......?
billl
|
88.2422 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Sep 20 1995 11:41 | 3 |
| > If a five gamer, is it 2-2-1 or 3-2......?
5 games in first round. 2-3 format (yes, that's right, 2-3)
|
88.2423 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Sep 20 1995 14:01 | 16 |
| The 2-3 format is the same as the one they used for the 1st few years of the
N.L.C.S and A.L.C.S. when they were 5 game series. Remember 1975 when the Red
Sox ended the A's chances of 4 in a row by winning the 1st two out there then
the 3rd game in Fenway for the sweep?
So it's 5 games for the 1st round (2-3) and 7 games for the league
championship series and the World Series, each 2-3-2.
Part of the reason they have to do things this way is that they have to
minimize travel time so that the pitching rotations will mean something. A
2-2-1 format with 2 travel days just wouldn't work. Also extra travel days
would stretch the season out too much. As it is they practically play into
November. In fact, isn't this the year that the 7th game of the World Series,
if needed, will be November 1st?
George
|
88.2424 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Wed Sep 20 1995 17:38 | 12 |
| > The 2-3 format is the same as the one they used for the 1st few years of the
>N.L.C.S and A.L.C.S. when they were 5 game series. Remember 1975 when the Red
>Sox ended the A's chances of 4 in a row by winning the 1st two out there then
>the 3rd game in Fenway for the sweep?
Actually the first two were in Fenway and the third in Oakland. Tiant was
great in the opener in blanking the A's and Ken Holtzman; Reggie Cleveland
started game two against Vida Blue, with Roger Moret getting the win in
relief; and the Sox won in it in Oakland, as Al Dark elected to start Holtzman
on two days rest instead of going to Dick Bosman (I think he was the #3 starter
that year for the A's).
|
88.2426 | Go Sox!!! | STOWOA::CIPOLLA | | Thu Sep 21 1995 08:35 | 4 |
| All of those readers that aren't from the New England area probably
aren't interested, those of you that are----CONGRATULATIONS RED SOX!!
|
88.2427 | Will they, or won't they blow it? | CNTROL::SALMON | | Thu Sep 21 1995 08:57 | 1 |
| Maybe now everyone can relax. Unbeliveable!
|
88.2428 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Sep 21 1995 08:58 | 14 |
| 11111
111111
1111111
11111111
1111
1111
1111
1111
1111
1111
1111
1111
111111111111
111111111111
|
88.2425 | 3-2 win last night | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Thu Sep 21 1995 09:11 | 24 |
|
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!
SOXS CLINCH!!!!!!!!!
|
88.2429 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Sep 21 1995 11:11 | 4 |
| > -< Will they, or won't they blow it? >-
> Maybe now everyone can relax. Unbeliveable!
Yeah, really. I mean, it's not like they're the California Angels !
|
88.2430 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Sep 21 1995 12:27 | 4 |
88.2431 | It's for the Indians to blow | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | There ain't no sanity clause | Fri Sep 22 1995 09:36 | 20 |
| >> > -< Will they, or won't they blow it? >-
>> > Maybe now everyone can relax. Unbeliveable!
>>
>>Yeah, really. I mean, it's not like they're the California Angels !
The Red Sox won't be favored in the playoffs, so strictly speaking, they
can't "blow" it. But they could lose to Cleveland. Anyone could. They
could lose to Seattle, which with the acquisition of Benes and the
return of Griffey is much better than its record.
Meanwhile, I haven't seen the Angels since those two outstanding series
with the Indians over a month ago. What has happened to them? Did the
hitting stop? Did the pitching go into the tank? Can Gary DiSarcina
have meant that much to them?
In any event, congrats to the Red Sox. Whatever happens from here on
out, it has been an outstanding season, one for all concerned to be
proud of.
Steve
|
88.2432 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Red Sox team slogan-Look how close we've been to winning it all | Fri Sep 22 1995 13:20 | 3 |
88.2433 | Records are deceiving | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | There ain't no sanity clause | Fri Sep 22 1995 13:24 | 11 |
| But that's my point, Paul. The record isn't as good an indicator of a
team's quality as how it's playing down the stretch.
And down the stretch, the Mariners look like a very good team. It might
well come down to the third starter deciding it by how well he pitches
his one game.
But I agree with you that the road to the World Series passes through
Cleveland.
Steve
|
88.2434 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Red Sox team slogan-Look how close we've been to winning it all | Fri Sep 22 1995 13:36 | 11 |
88.2435 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Sep 26 1995 18:08 | 15 |
| I'm not sure I completely buy into the "how they're playing down the
stretch stuff" as an indicator of how a team is going to do in the
playoffs. In '81 the Yanks were a .500 team in the 2nd half (strike-
interrupted season), but made the playoffs as the 1st half winner.
They had a great best-of-5 against Milw (went the distance) and blew
away Oakland 4 straight in the ALCS. They then gave away the WS to
the Dodgers (were up 2-0) when The Idiot meddled and benched Jerry
Mumphrey in Game 4 for not running out a groundball in Game 3. Bobby
Brown (his replacement) misplayed a ball in CF and the Yanks lost a
game they had in hand (which would have given them a commanding 3-1
lead).
But anyway, if "how they're playing down the stretch" means anything,
Boston is in trouble, as the others (Cle, Sea, NY) are playing great
and they're not.
|
88.2436 | A Tale of Two Idiots | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Sep 26 1995 18:35 | 8 |
| Well Joe, our Idiot, Heywood Sullivan got rid of three of our best
players because he was mad at them, one of them Fisk for nothing
resulting in the Sox sitting the playoffs out. Fortunately the widder
Yawkey who didn't claim to be a baseball genius just to have plain ol'
horse sense booted ol' Heywood out.
I think Heywood played a little to long at Ohio State (or somewhere)
with that leather helmut.
|
88.2437 | Let the Yankees in, for "the good of the game" | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 27 1995 12:35 | 9 |
|
Well, in the opening round (baseball's official imprimateur is the
LDS-- League Division Series-- these guys are no Latter Day Saints),
it's beginning to look a lot like Cleveland. Which would mean that
the ongoing Cleveland-Boston LDUC would ultimately be decided in
Fenway Park, haid-to-hiad, next weekend. Cain't wait!
glenn
|
88.2438 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Oct 06 1995 13:51 | 1 |
88.2439 | Mo is having trouble adjusting to the no cork bat | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Year 78 in the Sox 100 year rebuilding program - 1996 | Fri Oct 06 1995 13:53 | 2 |
88.2440 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 06 1995 14:04 | 11 |
| I haven't heard much from either of them but I wouldn't call going going 0
for 10 against 1st rate pitchers a slump.
A slump is when a player goes for a couple weeks and can't seem to figure out
how to hit the ball against all levels of major league pitchers.
Tonight is a new night in a new Ball Park and as the saying goes, in baseball
momentum is only as good as tomorrow's starting pitcher.
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2442 | Gut check time for the first time in Mo career can he do it? | AD::HEATH | New England Patriots 1996 Super Bowl Champs | Fri Oct 06 1995 14:32 | 9 |
|
George...
Sorry but when your in a best of 5 if you go 0-4 you be in a slump.
Mo and Jose aint got 142 more games left to get straightened out. It
is do or die time.
Jerry
|
88.2443 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 06 1995 14:44 | 24 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2442 by AD::HEATH "New England Patriots 1996 Super Bowl Champs" >>>
> Sorry but when your in a best of 5 if you go 0-4 you be in a slump.
> Mo and Jose aint got 142 more games left to get straightened out. It
> is do or die time.
That's like saying if you sneeze in an elevator you must have TB because
the people sharing the elevator with you only care what you do while they
are with you in the car.
The definition of a hitting slump has been the same for decades and it is
defined as a period which normally lasts several weeks in which there is a
remarkable decrease in a hitters ability to hit a ball against all levels of
pitchers. It has never been defined as a period in which a hitter is 3 lucky
swings away from hitting .300.
Considering the level of pitching you would expect Mo and Canseco to be
hitting around .200 to .250 which is only a couple lucky swings away from where
they are right now.
As always, it takes skill to make a playoff, but it takes luck to win one and
right now the BoSox are short on luck.
George
|
88.2444 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | Year 78 in the Sox 100 year rebuilding program - 1996 | Fri Oct 06 1995 14:58 | 3 |
88.2445 | should say 'aren't' giving them much to hit | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Oct 06 1995 15:20 | 4 |
88.2446 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 06 1995 15:49 | 4 |
| Yes, Nagy v. Wakefield.
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2447 | just curious.... | FABSIX::J_PAGE | | Fri Oct 06 1995 15:54 | 7 |
| Does anyone know the stats (joe Huber)for Manny Ramierez, Jim Thome,
Carlos Baerga,Paul Sorrento, Kenny Lofton and Sandy Alomar?? I don't
think anyone of them is having a great offensive series either........
Or if you have the stats for both teams that would even better.
john
|
88.2448 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:14 | 16 |
| >> The definition of a hitting slump has been the same for decades
>> and it is defined as a period which normally lasts several weeks
>> in which there is a remarkable decrease in a hitters ability to
>> hit a ball against all levels of pitchers. It has never been defined
>> as a period in which a hitter is 3 lucky swings away from hitting
>> .300.
First, that's *your* definition. 0-10 in a short series is a SLUMP.
We don't have 10 more games to meet *your* arbitrary definition.
Like Jerry said, 'it's do or die'. If Mo goes 0-14 in a three game
sweep are you going to come in here and tell us that in 7 more games
it would officially been a slump. Ridiculous. Second, it ain't a
matter a luck. George, you have this habit of chalking up far too many
things to luck. It ain't luck. The Indians' pitchers have shut Mo and
Jose down.
|
88.2449 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:15 | 7 |
|
>> Why fair weather, because you decided to jump on the bandwagon?
No, because you went from among the worst teams in home attendance
to a packed house and all because the Indians are winning. The very
definition of fair weather fandom.
|
88.2450 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:42 | 1 |
88.2451 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:56 | 33 |
|
> Does anyone know the stats (joe Huber)for Manny Ramierez, Jim Thome,
> Carlos Baerga,Paul Sorrento, Kenny Lofton and Sandy Alomar?? I don't
> think anyone of them is having a great offensive series either........
Ramirez is 0 for 10.
Thome is 1 for 10 (a single)
Baerga is 2 for 9, with a run scored.
Sorrento is 1 for 6, with a walk and a run scored.
Lofton is 1 for 8, with a walk and a run scored.
Alomar is 1 for 6 (the bunt single).
Overall, the Tribe offense has been putrid; only Belle & Murray
are providing much production.
For the Sox, Alicea's 4 for 6 (1 2B, 1 HR, 2 walks), Macfarlane's
2 for 6, McGee's 1 for 3, Greenwell's 3 for 10, and from there it
falls off quickly. Valentin's 2 for 8, and Naehring's 2 for 9,
with a HR each; Canseco (10 AB), Haselman (2), Hosey (9), Stairs (1),
Vuaghn (10), and Tinsley (5) are all 0-fer, though Hosey & Tinsley
each have a walk (Valentin has 2).
Yuck. Between the two teams you could almost construct an
offense (Belle & Murray & Alicea & Valenitn & Macfarlane &
Greenwell & um, no one else to speak of). It's certainly been
a pitcher's series...
Joe
|
88.2452 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Red Sox - 1995 AL East Champs | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:56 | 6 |
|
Sox fans have no fear. Tim Wakefield is 7-0 with a 1.32 ERA. After
a Red Sox loss. The Sox were shutout once during the regular season.
After that shutdown they went on a 12 game win streak.
Ron
|
88.2453 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 06 1995 17:21 | 25 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2448 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
> First, that's *your* definition. 0-10 in a short series is a SLUMP.
> We don't have 10 more games to meet *your* arbitrary definition.
No, this is flat out wrong. I'll bet that if you ask any batting coach who
works with real major league hitters how he defines a batting slump and whether
he thinks that some guy going 0for's in two games against hot pitchers is in a
slump I'll bet he'd say no.
In all the years I've been a fan I've heard many coaches talking about slumps
but I've never heard a coach call two hitless games a slump. So no, it's not
*my* arbitrary definition, it's the one I've heard from coaches all of my life.
Slumps are not simply stretches when someone doesn't get a hit. They are
stretches when someone's ability against a given set of pitchers decreases
dramatically. They are stretches where a batter talks to his coach about how
the bat doesn't feel right, the ball doesn't look right, he has no sense of
timing, he can't pick up the rotation, and on and on. And again, this is not my
definition, it's the one I hear players and coaches talk about.
So no, Mo and Jose are not necessarily in slumps. They just didn't get a hit
for a couple games against two of the hottest pitchers in the American League.
George
|
88.2454 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Fri Oct 06 1995 17:41 | 22 |
|
>> In all the years I've been a fan I've heard many coaches talking
>> about slumps but I've never heard a coach call two hitless games
>> a slump. So no, it's not *my* arbitrary definition, it's the one
>> I've heard from coaches all of my life.
What you're continually leaving out is that's it's oh-fer-ten in
a *FIVE GAME SERIES*. oh-fer-ten in the regular season is a couple
of bad days. In a short series it's a slump. It's a minor tragedy.
Turn it around. Ten-fer-ten in the regular season would be a couple
of great days. In a five game series, you're carrying your club.
>> So no, Mo and Jose are not necessarily in slumps. They just didn't
>> get a hit for a couple games against two of the hottest pitchers in
>> the American League.
You're also missing the cuase and effect thang there, George. And
it wasn't just "two of the hottest pitchers in the American League"
(again, your definition) who have stymied Jose and Mo but any hurler
in an Indians uniform.
|
88.2455 | 0 for 10, 0 RBIs | LEXSS1::MURPHY | | Fri Oct 06 1995 17:51 | 6 |
| George,
Wake up. 0 for 10 in two playoff games (losses) is a slump when you
are the production part of the order.
Dan
|
88.2456 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 06 1995 18:25 | 33 |
| The mistake you guys are making is in your definition of the word slump.
You seem to be saying:
1). If a batter fails to hit when it is important, that's a slump.
2). In a 5 game series, two games are important.
3). Mo and Jose have failed to hit in 2 games.
Therefor, they are in a slump.
The problem is not with steps 2 or 3. Yes in a 5 game series two games are
important and yes Mo and Jose have failed to hit in two games.
The problem is with step 1. Just because a batter fails to hit when it is
important, that doesn't mean he's in a slump. A hitless streak yes. A very
important hitless streak yes. But that doesn't necessarily make it a slump.
A slump is a hitless streak that happens for a specific mental reason
involving confusion, uneasiness at the plate, timing problems, etc against
the same pitchers the hitter was able to handle earlier.
At least that's the definition I hear from coaches, players, and from
player/announcers. They will talk about how you doubt yourself during a slump,
how you feel frustrated, how your timing is wrong. And most important they
compare it to a common cold and say that often times a slump comes like a cold,
lasts two weeks like a cold, can't be cured like a cold, and goes away after 2
weeks like a cold.
Yes I understand Mo and Jose's 2 game hitless streak is important but that
doesn't make it a slump. A sky diver's parachute is important but he doesn't
call that a slump. The word "slump" is not a synonym for "important", it is a
particular type of hitting problem and it's not at all clear that a slump is
the cause of Mo and/or Jose not hitting.
George
|
88.2457 | | GENRAL::WADE | Ah'm Yo Huckleberry... | Fri Oct 06 1995 18:28 | 4 |
|
Call it what it really is. A choke.
Claybone
|
88.2458 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 06 1995 18:33 | 4 |
| That's better. A choke is often used to mean someone not able to come
through when it's important.
George
|
88.2459 | could be | BSS::MENDEZ | | Fri Oct 06 1995 18:48 | 4 |
| Being an A's fan...I've seen Jose disappear in a big series.
BTW maybe its not a choke or slump, maybe the pitching is just
that much better...
|
88.2460 | bring out the B R O O M ! ! ! | SUBPAC::WHITEHAIR | Central Division Champs=Indians | Fri Oct 06 1995 20:04 | 9 |
|
Yesterday on ESPN they showed the batting series that mOfer and
jOfer had against Cleveland pitching and the overwelming opinion was
that the Cleveland pitching staff has made no mistakes! The Tribe
has stepped it up!!!
The Chief,
Wahooo!
|
88.2461 | SOX SWEPT WITH EASE, TROUNCED 8-2 | FABSIX::E_MAXWELL | N.E. Patriots...Bound to win one. | Sat Oct 07 1995 05:00 | 6 |
| Mo & Jose, The 0'fer series brothers. !3 straight
playoff loses dating back to the '86 World Series.
Let's Go Bruins!
Lil Ed
|
88.2462 | You can argue but thats it for me on the subject | AD::HEATH | Tribe Roooools Sox;Sox commit biggest choke in sports | Sat Oct 07 1995 08:07 | 16 |
|
First off thanks Tommy you beat me to it.
George...
Tommy said everthing I wanted to say but one thing. I have talked
to a ML manager and do you know what he thinks about slumps? They
don't exist. It is all in ones own head, ie you loose confidence in
yourself. This can happen over the course of 10 games or one at bat.
Mo and Jose where both trying to do to much and lost touch with what
got them here. After the first game both had made adjustments to the
ole hitch dip an drive routine (pull everying, swing from you heals)
and it showed. 0fer series.
Jerry
|
88.2463 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Cleveland Indians a great team from a great city | Mon Oct 09 1995 09:36 | 12 |
|
You guys got the white flag over Fenway!!
So is this dream season II??
Chap
|
88.2464 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Mon Oct 09 1995 10:19 | 29 |
|
> You guys got the white flag over Fenway!!
>
> So is this dream season II??
>
>
> Chap
Look who's talking..... You want the replay? Or should I just wink
at ya..... Griffey rounds 3rd........
To me, the highlight of this baseball season, and there weren't many since
I abhor this new playoff system, was the look on George Steinbrenner's
face just after Griffey slid home.
Re the Slump. Man, I haven't heard such a LDUC in here in ages, and SPORTS
is famous for its LDUCs.
WHAT DIFFERENCE DOES IT MAKE? DOES ANYBODY GIVE 2 ____s? I DON'T!
0-fer is 0-fer and it don't matter if it's a slump, a slouch, a bend-over,
a depression, a dip, a doodle, or a bender. It's still 0-fer.
'Saw
|
88.2465 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 09 1995 10:38 | 36 |
| RE<<< Note 88.2462 by AD::HEATH "Tribe Roooools Sox;Sox commit biggest choke in sports" >>>
> Tommy said everthing I wanted to say but one thing. I have talked
> to a ML manager and do you know what he thinks about slumps? They
> don't exist. It is all in ones own head, ie you loose confidence in
> yourself.
You are contradicting yourself. First you say a slump doesn't exist, then you
say slumps exist inside a person's head. You sound like someone making one of
those "software will be there when we need it because it isn't real" type
speeches the hardware guys like to make. That's like saying VMS and UNIX don't
exist, they are all in a computer's memory. If it exists inside his head and
it's effects can be measured, then it exists.
RE Vaughn and Canseco
It was too early to tell based on 3 games but Vaughn had all the signs of
being in a real slump. That last strikeout where he swung at a ball in the dirt
for strike 2 and one over his head for strike 3 looked like a case of pure
frustration. As for what would have happened in the real season it's hard to
tell. I've seen guys do that in a 3 game series then recover once they faced a
new team and I've seen guys go into a real slump after having that type of
experience.
By contrast Canseco was obviously not in a real slump. In 5 plate appearances
he walked twice and hit a line drive really hard with at least a couple guys on
base but he was unlucky and hit it right at Bell. Had his luck been a bit
better on that swing he would have hit .333 for the game with a .600 on base
percentage. That is obviously not a slump, just bad luck.
RE The Sox
Not a bad season. Predicted to come in 4th by a bunch of publications they
ended up Eastern Division Champs. Not half bad.
George
|
88.2466 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Mon Oct 09 1995 10:38 | 4 |
|
MVP Vaughn really stepped it up in the playoffs.....Let's hear all those
reasons again why E. Martinez shouldn't be concidered an MVP candidate?
|
88.2467 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Red Sox - 1995 AL East Champs | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:01 | 9 |
|
re .2466,
The reason has been given. Edgar is one dimensional. He doesn't
play the field. Both Belle and Vaughn are not superstars defensively.
So they both have to practice and work on defense. While Edgar just
concentrates on hitting.
Ron
|
88.2468 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:25 | 24 |
|
>> You are contradicting yourself. First you say a slump doesn't exist,
>> then you say slumps exist inside a person's head.
I fail to see the contradiction. It's no different than your parents
telling you that the bogeyman doesn't exist, it's all in your head.
He may seem real and exist to you but he's no more a physical entity
than a bad dream is.
>> It was too early to tell based on 3 games but Vaughn had all the signs
>> of being in a real slump.
Get real. Get serious. Get help. Does he have to go 0-42 before he
meets your arbitrary defifnition of what a slump is? As it was he met
the incorrect definition that you gave in 88.2456. That is:
" A slump is a hitless streak that happens for a specific mental
reason involving confusion, uneasiness at the plate, timing problems,
etc against the same pitchers the hitter was able to handle earlier."
A slump isn't necessarily a "hitless" streak. 2 for 28 is a slump.
1 for 23 is a slump.
|
88.2469 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:30 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2467 by SNAX::ERICKSON "Red Sox - 1995 AL East Champs" >>>
> The reason has been given. Edgar is one dimensional. He doesn't
> play the field. Both Belle and Vaughn are not superstars defensively.
> So they both have to practice and work on defense. While Edgar just
> concentrates on hitting.
I don't really buy that reason. The award is the MVP for Most Valuable
Player, not the PWHTTJ for Player Who Had the Toughest Job. And by convention
the voting is usually biased toward the offense since the best pitchers are
almost always more valuable than the best hitters.
Taken that way Edgar was very valuable to his team and is definitely a top
contender for the award despite not playing the field. And if Bell and Vaughn
are Edgar's competition, neither did all that much in the field to distinguish
himself.
George
|
88.2470 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:39 | 32 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2468 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
> I fail to see the contradiction. It's no different than your parents
> telling you that the bogeyman doesn't exist, it's all in your head.
> He may seem real and exist to you but he's no more a physical entity
> than a bad dream is.
Thoughts are physical entities. They are patterns of very real electricity
flowing through a very real neural network.
> " A slump is a hitless streak that happens for a specific mental
> reason involving confusion, uneasiness at the plate, timing problems,
> etc against the same pitchers the hitter was able to handle earlier."
By the end of game 3 Mo Vaughn was looking like he was in a slump according
to that definition above, but as I said Jose did not look like he was in a
slump. That line drive he hit right at Bell with runners aboard was not the
type of frustrated flailing someone does when in a slump and he managed to
draw a couple walks with little effort.
> A slump isn't necessarily a "hitless" streak. 2 for 28 is a slump.
> 1 for 23 is a slump.
Ok, so the Sox lost the 1975 World Series because down 1 run in the bottom of
the 9th in game 7 with the tying run on 1st Yaz came about 30 feet short of
hitting a home run to win the Championship. Was Yaz in a slump for that one at
bat? He was by the definition you guys gave earlier which implied a slump was
failure to hit during an important interval.
I say no, that alone didn't make it a slump, just a pop fly to the outfield.
George
|
88.2471 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:43 | 6 |
|
I agree with George........If Martinez hit .400, 65hr's, 150rbi
and had 70 game winning hits, you tell me he shouldn't qualify
as an MVP candidate?
|
88.2472 | :*) | ACIS02::WIERSBECK | | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:46 | 7 |
| OK, I'll say it: (but I know all you other non-Sox fans were thinking
it :*)
The Red Sox are in a TEAM slump!
Spud
|
88.2473 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:13 | 22 |
|
>> Thoughts are physical entities. They are patterns of very real
>> electricity flowing through a very real neural network.
So when Roosevelt said "we have nothing to fear but fear itself" what
he really meant was "we have nothing to fear but a pattern of electr-
icity flowing through the neural network manifesting itself in feelings
of dread and anxiety"? Doesn't have the same ring to it.
>> Ok, so the Sox lost the 1975 World Series because down 1 run in the
>> bottom of the 9th in game 7 with the tying run on 1st Yaz came about
>> 30 feet short of hitting a home run to win the Championship. Was Yaz
>> in a slump for that one at bat? He was by the definition you guys gave
>> earlier which implied a slump was failure to hit during an important
>> interval.
I don't know who "you guys" is because I never defined a slump that
way. And your example doesn't make any more sense than your comment
about thoughts being physical entities. One at bat does not a slump
make nor do 20. Like the man said, "I can't define pornograhy but I
know it when I see it. Pass me that magazine."
|
88.2474 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Red Sox - 1995 AL East Champs | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:41 | 22 |
|
Well part of the MVP vote. Is SUPPOSE to take into account
defense.
"If Martinez hit .400, 65hr's, 150rbi and had 70 game winning
hits, you tell me he shouldn't qualify as an MVP candidate?"
He didn't do any of the four, so its a mute point. Anybody who
did that would win the MVP unanimously.
I never said Martinez was not an MVP candidate. Forget that he
was a DH, and assume he played the field. He still wouldn't win the MVP
this year. Its going to be Belle, Vaughn, then Martinez.
You can make arguments for all 3, but only 1 will win. Cleveland
and Seattle were picked to finish 1st, in there division. While the
Sox were picked 3rd. So there is an argument for Vaughn. Cleveland won
100 games, Belle had 50 hr/50 doubles. There is an argument for Belle.
Martinez lead the league in hitting, plus was in the top 5 in most
other categorys. He carried the team while Griffey was out. There is
your argument for Martinez winning.
Ron
|
88.2475 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:42 | 36 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2473 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
> So when Roosevelt said "we have nothing to fear but fear itself" what
> he really meant was "we have nothing to fear but a pattern of electr-
> icity flowing through the neural network manifesting itself in feelings
> of dread and anxiety"? Doesn't have the same ring to it.
Yes, I agree. But most people knew what he meant. He was saying that the only
problem we had was our own fear. He did not say we have nothing to fear at all
because the fear was real and could cause real problems.
> I don't know who "you guys" is because I never defined a slump that
> way. And your example doesn't make any more sense than your comment
> about thoughts being physical entities.
Whooo, a paragraph ago we agreed that thoughts were real. Now you are back to
saying they are not real. Make up your mind.
>One at bat does not a slump
> make nor do 20. Like the man said, "I can't define pornograhy but I
> know it when I see it. Pass me that magazine."
The man was Associate Justice Potter Stewert of the United States Supreme
Court since retired.
Anyway my point exactly. What Mo was going through looked like a slump by the
end of game 3. What Jose was going through did not look like a slump, he just
got out pitched for the 1st two games then had some bad luck during game 3. If
Bell had been positioned 20 feet to one side, that line shot Canseco hit would
have scored at least 2 runs and he would have ended up hitting .333 for the
game with a .600 OBP.
His failure to drive in those runs depended only on Bell's position, not any
sort of lack of confidence about his ability to hit the ball.
George
|
88.2476 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:58 | 13 |
|
>> Whooo, a paragraph ago we agreed that thoughts were real. Now you
>> are back to saying they are not real. Make up your mind.
I never said any such thing. I still think your original statement was
ridiculous.
>> Anyway my point exactly. What Mo was going through looked like a slump
>> by the end of game 3.
It looked like a slump much earlier than that to most of us.
|
88.2477 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:19 | 2 |
88.2478 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:25 | 15 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2476 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
> It looked like a slump much earlier than that to most of us.
Sure, it looked like a slump to me as well. Any time three starting pitchers
like Martinez, Hershiser, and Naggy and relief pitchers like the Tribe's bull
pen have it going the way those guys did, anyone who plays against them will
look like they are in a slump. But funny how those guys all suddenly end their
"slump" when they leave town and play another team.
Yes I agree, it looked like a slump. But unless we saw Vaughn play someone
else we wouldn't know if it were a slump or if it were just a hitless streak
caused by some really tough pitchers.
George
|
88.2479 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:45 | 16 |
|
>> Sure, it looked like a slump to me as well. Any time three starting
>> pitchers like Martinez, Hershiser, and Naggy and relief pitchers like
>> the Tribe's bull pen have it going the way those guys did,
You started off with two pitchers now you've expanded to three plus
the bullpen. If this were to have gone on any longer I have no doubt
you'd be going, "Yeah, he hasn't had a hit against 20 straight pitchers
in 47 straight at bats *BUT* it ain't a slump 'til..."
>> Yes I agree, it looked like a slump. But unless we saw Vaughn play
>> someone else we wouldn't know if it were a slump or if it were just
>> a hitless streak caused by some really tough pitchers.
Hahahaha. Like the two are mutually exclusive?
|
88.2480 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:50 | 9 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2479 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
> You started off with two pitchers now you've expanded to three plus
> the bullpen.
That's because the debate started after game 2. I expanded to 3 starters
because they played another game.
George
|
88.2481 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:56 | 25 |
|
In other news...
I was at the game Friday and while the game itself was awful to
behold, the Cleveland fans in attendance were rather entertaining.
There were a couple parading the aisle behind me, one with a cowbell
the other with a banner. Every time Cleveland did something good,
which was all too often, these two would go strutting up and down
the concourse, the one banging on the cowbell, the other waving
his banner. Not a sight you see every game at staid Fenway where
fans cheer loudly but it is frowned upon to make a spectacle of
yourself. The play is the thing doncha know. There were Clevelanders
sprinkled here and there amongst the crowd and while they were vocal
it was hard not to like them or their team even while they were
beating the stuffing out of the Old Towne Team. I can't actually
bring myself to root for the Indians but if they win it all the
worst of it will be what happens in here.
And for proof that Boston is not idiot-freee, some moron ran on the
field early in the game and did a head first dive into second base.
Must have been a New Yorker.
BTW - my seats were in section 43 right next to the players wives and
girlfriends. Forget the money, I'd like to play pro ball just
for the perks.
|
88.2482 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Mon Oct 09 1995 15:39 | 10 |
| > And for proof that Boston is not idiot-freee, some moron ran on the
> field early in the game and did a head first dive into second base.
> Must have been a New Yorker.
No one said Boston was idiot-free, but in this case I believe it was
a local who cheers for Cleveland first, New York second, who performed
said lame dive into second base.
Wasn't it ?
|
88.2483 | Even bigger idiots were those that cheered him... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Oct 09 1995 15:51 | 14 |
|
> No one said Boston was idiot-free, but in this case I believe it was
> a local who cheers for Cleveland first, New York second, who performed
> said lame dive into second base.
From my more distant vantage point, the guy kind of looked like
Randy Johnson. But I'm pretty sure that Randy and "Mr. Snappy"
were on the mound in Seattle at the exact same moment...
Guy had to be hurting (the next morning, at least) from that
massive belly-flop he did into second though.
glenn
|
88.2484 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | Cleveland Indians are king, Eddie Murray is gawd... | Mon Oct 09 1995 16:27 | 8 |
| > But I'm pretty sure that Randy and "Mr. Snappy"
> were on the mound in Seattle at the exact same moment...
I saw the Mr. Snappy commercial for the first time about a
week ago. I was rollward...
It reminded me a lot of the NHL commercials - especially the
Martin Brodeur one.
|
88.2485 | Boy did this note go into a slump today | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Oct 09 1995 18:50 | 1 |
|
|
88.2486 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Oct 10 1995 09:02 | 4 |
|
It's over.
George
|
88.2487 | A good old fashion spanking | CSLALL::BRULE | you killed freakin Larry! | Tue Oct 10 1995 09:18 | 6 |
| Congrats to the Indians. The far better team won. The Sox won more then
they probably should have and exceded a lot of people's expectations.
This team is still 2-3 years away unless they go wacky in Free Agent
signings.
Mike
|
88.2488 | Bahhhh Hate to say I told you so!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed Dec 13 1995 11:50 | 23 |
| <<< CAM::$1$DUA5:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SPORTS.NOTE;1 >>>
-< SPORTS >-
================================================================================
Note 88.2070 Boston Red Sox 2070 of 2487
WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "the Halfway House Ruth Built.." 16 lines 7-JUL-1995 09:14
-< This is one Happy Yankee fan!!!! >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BAHHHHHHHHHHH
I didn't know Gorman was back. Trade your #1 pitching prospect
for a guy who will only be there 3 months.
Even if by some miracle they hold off Det/NYY/Bal Aggie caan't
pitch every inning vs Cle in the playoffs. Stupid move. Rodriguez will
be the real thing.
Glad to know even with Duke at the helm, the sox are still MLB
biggest joke.
|
88.2489 | more like love to tell ya so!!!!!!!! | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Wed Dec 13 1995 12:26 | 4 |
|
than why did ya????????
;^)
|
88.2490 | Chappy thanks for the nice laugh | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Dec 13 1995 13:14 | 1 |
|
|
88.2491 | | CSLALL::BRULE | country in need of a leader | Wed Dec 13 1995 16:06 | 17 |
| Yeah Chappy, That's not like the Yankees to trade one of their top
young pitchers and one of their top hitting prospects for someone who
has played one full season out of the last 4 and paying him 4+ mill a
year.
As far as the Aggie trade
the Sox would not have finished ahead of the Yankees this year if they
don't trade for Aggie. And Aggie had to take a 50% cut in pay to go
back to Minnesota because both Boston AND Baltimore wouldn't pay big
bucks. So what you have is renting a top player for the season for a
prospect who may or may not shine. Now how many deals in MLB has this
happened?
And what will the Yank-me's have to show for Cone when he resigns
elsewhere? The same as the Red sox. And what about Black Jack
MacDowell? One season and gone.
Mike
|
88.2492 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Never make it up to Coeur D'Alene | Thu Dec 14 1995 10:03 | 9 |
|
While Chappy's gloating over the Sox trading someone who probably
will be "the real thing", at something, but not pitching, Duquette
is in the process of lifting the Yankees' legit frontline catcher.
Piece by piece, the Yankees are having their backbone surgically
removed, from the front office right on down the line...
glenn
|
88.2493 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Dec 14 1995 10:36 | 5 |
| Are the Sox still after Stanley?
How's that going?
George
|
88.2494 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Dec 14 1995 10:53 | 3 |
| I thought the Stanley thing was about dead. Stanley seems to want
market value. DD will probably resign the guy from last year for about
a mil inc. incentives.
|
88.2495 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | I've always been a closet Steeler fan - even though they suck! | Thu Dec 14 1995 13:16 | 4 |
88.2496 | in a short series | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Fri Dec 15 1995 07:18 | 8 |
|
I don't think anyone feels signing Stanley is going to make the Sox
the favorite in the AL. But so far DD has improved the team over last
year.
Jerry
|
88.2497 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | Will work for sleep.. | Fri Dec 15 1995 09:29 | 4 |
|
Sox signed Stanley.
Bye, Mike Mac - a pleasure knowing you...
|
88.2498 | Clemens better work on that move to 1B. | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Dec 15 1995 10:16 | 6 |
| Stanley will hit well in Fenway. He hits high flies rather than line
drives. He'll give you 20+ HRs easy.
BUT, wait 'til you get a look at the turnstiles on the basepaths.
So many times Stanley never even bothered to throw down to 2B.
He's really pathetic in that regard.
|
88.2499 | The Sox get better | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Fri Dec 15 1995 10:34 | 12 |
| Throwing isn't the best part of Stanley's game, but holding runners wasn't
exactly a feature of the Yankee pitching staff, either.
The bottom line is that the Red Sox have improved. Stanley is a better
catcher and a better hitter than Macfarlane.
And what is New York thinking of? Not only have they lost talent, they've
lost clubhouse presence. In 1996 the room will lack Stanley, Mattingly,
McDowell (if it is true that he's about to sign with Cleveland), and of
course Showalter. I'm afraid it's going to be a long season in New York.
Steve
|
88.2500 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Fri Dec 15 1995 11:22 | 9 |
|
re: -1...
Can you provide stats showing that the Yankee pitchers
had problems holding runners? Or this a made up observation?
Stanley was also 3rd in the league in PB's....
|
88.2501 | Steve is right bottom line is Yankmees made a mistake Sox get better | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Fri Dec 15 1995 13:08 | 4 |
|
Looks like the Yankee hype machine is in full swing. We got rid of
the stiff because.......
|
88.2502 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Fri Dec 15 1995 13:14 | 14 |
|
Wrong....Stanley has a good bat and will be missed for his
Offense, but we won't miss his defense...take a look through the
Yankees notesfile....plenty of criticism about STanley's Defense
in there...but of course we all knew two years ago the Sox would
be signing him this year.........Stanley is a good signing for
the sox.....The Yanks will miss him at times....but I'd rather see
them spend the money on a pitcher.....The sox finally have a
respectable catcher in what about 10 years...
Bob
|
88.2503 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Dec 15 1995 15:41 | 26 |
| > Looks like the Yankee hype machine is in full swing. We got rid of
> the stiff because.......
Yeah, that's exactly what Bob and I wrote.
Hey Steve, how many Yankee games did you watch or listen to this past
season ? I'm sure I caught part of most of 70-80% of their games.
As the season went on the throws over to 1B increased to a point of
boring us to tears. And it didn't matter, the guy would go on the
next pitch and get to 2B without a problem.
You're getting a good offensive catcher. But that's it.
re: losing clubhouse people
There's no doubt that this is a BIG area of concern for the Yankees.
Steinbrenner created this problem when he let Buck go. Mattingly
and Stanley BOTH publicly supported Showalter, so to think that
they'd even want to come back to NY is ignorant.
No matter how many good players the Yanks bring in, Torre has an
incredible job ahead of him. Building a winner in one season,
after this much turnover, is nearly impossible.
|
88.2504 | Talk about your automatic SB.. | SALEM::DODA | BC:Invincible in peace, invisible in war | Mon Dec 18 1995 12:26 | 4 |
| If Stanley is such a stiff throwing runners out where does that
leave Leyritz?
daryll
|
88.2505 | what about Rich Gedman ???? | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Dec 18 1995 16:00 | 4 |
| >If Stanley is such a stiff throwing runners out where does that
>leave Leyritz?
Darryl, what does Leyritz have to do with Stanley's signing with Boston ?
|
88.2506 | | SALEM::DODA | BC:Invincible in peace, invisible in war | Mon Dec 18 1995 16:16 | 7 |
| Gee Joe,
I keep hearing that Stanley is a stiff when it comes to throwing
out runners. The other NY catcher is Leyritz isn't it? He's the
guy with the rep of being able to run on at will isn't he?
daryll
|
88.2507 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Mon Dec 18 1995 16:25 | 9 |
|
YEah I don't understand what Leyritz has to do with it either?
They both stunk at throwing out runners that's why the Yanks
ranked near the bottom in the stat.....and hopefully that
won't be a problem this season with Girardi....Hey I heard
the sox released Dave Hollins...What do they have left from the
trade with Philly?
|
88.2508 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Dec 18 1995 16:27 | 10 |
|
Actually, the Yankee catcher is now Joe Girardi.
Of course, the Yankee's now have a worse, more expensive catcher
than Stanley - Girardi is offensively inept, and nowhere close to
enough better than Stanley defensively to make up for that fact.
It's a good time for Yankee detractors...
Joe
|
88.2509 | Bring on the bullfighter (or is that the jockey?) Cordero | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Jan 10 1996 11:21 | 32 |
|
The Wil Cordero-to-Boston rumors are reaching the point of critical
mass, where they must be taken seriously. Cordero had a bit of a
down year in 1995, but yet at the tender age of 24 (I still can't
get used to looking up these guys' birthdates and finding them in
the 1970s, and now it's all the way up to 1975 in some cases) he
falls under the category of "Real Ballplayer". The Red Sox still
don't have many of those, at the ML level. Cordero is a guy who
can hit for some power, and is young enough where he could at least
passably hold down a position at 2B, maybe even 3B, or even LF
(played some there last year), and yet still take over at SS in
3-4 years if Valentin goes 'round the bend.
Also, I saw a quote in Sunday's paper from the totally unassailable
Buck Showalter that Mike Stanley is an excellent handler of pitchers,
and caller of games. So he isn't the greatest at throwing out
runners. Fact is, if you want to rank the priorities at the position,
in reality they are as follows: 1) calling the game, 2) hit, or hit
for power, 3) throw out runners. As the stolen base is a fairly
overrated element in the entire scheme of the game, logically the
it follows for a catcher's ability to stop the same. Mike Macfarlane
disappointed in all three categories last year, as 2) was the one he
was supposed to deliver. Tony Pena was great at calling a game, but
fairly mediocre at throwing runners out (and we know all too well that
he can't hit himself out of a wet paper bag unless a critical playoff
game against the Red Sox is at stake), but it doesn't hurt his overall
defensive reputation. So if Stanley can call a game _and_ hit as he
has the past few years, as far as I'm concerned, the Sox got
themselves the best catcher that short or even money can buy.
glenn
|
88.2510 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Can the Coach... | Wed Jan 10 1996 11:30 | 13 |
|
One thing mentioned that I didn't know about Stanley. Is that
he is part Cuban and speaks Spanish. Which can be a plus when
dealing with Hispanic pitchers.
The Cuban sweepstakes for the first two pitchers should be decided
on Friday, when all bids are suppose to be in. Most say that Toronto
has the inside track for the one pitcher who is married. Canada has
a relationship with Cuba, so he would be able to get his wife out
of Cuba right away without any problems.
Two more Cuban pitchers were declared free agents. They can sign
with any team after January 15th.
Ron
|
88.2511 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Jan 10 1996 11:37 | 25 |
|
> Fact is, if you want to rank the priorities at the position,
> in reality they are as follows: 1) calling the game, 2) hit, or hit
> for power, 3) throw out runners.
OK, I'm certain throwing out runners is the least important. But is
game calling really more valuable than hitting? Can a catcher really
contribute more there than with his bat?
I don't believe so, but I'm not convinced that it's _not_ the case
either. In fact, I'd go so far as to agree that there is some evidence
to support your ranking.
> So if Stanley can call a game _and_ hit as he
> has the past few years, as far as I'm concerned, the Sox got
> themselves the best catcher that short or even money can buy.
No question about it. The only catchers I'd rather have right now
are Piazza and Lopez.
BTW - while the Yankees have been attempting to make up for it lately,
their decision to let Stanley go so that they could trade for Girardi
and pay him more money has to be the most stupid I've seen this winter.
Joe
|
88.2512 | Strength up the middle starts behind the plate | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Thu Jan 11 1996 08:22 | 38 |
| > OK, I'm certain throwing out runners is the least important. But is
> game calling really more valuable than hitting? Can a catcher really
> contribute more there than with his bat?
>
> I don't believe so, but I'm not convinced that it's _not_ the case
> either. In fact, I'd go so far as to agree that there is some evidence
> to support your ranking.
You surprise me, Joe. Of all the people in this notesfile, you are the one
I would have expected to be familiar with Bill James' work on catching (I
believe it was also he who first computed catcher's ERA, which STATS, Inc.,
publishes in its annual statistical compendium). James demonstrated that a
catcher can make a full run's worth of difference in ERA to his pitchers,
not only calling the game, but doing all of the things that a good catcher
does: handling the pitcher, blocking the plate, fielding popups and bunts,
throwing, and--most importantly--catching the ball. Major League pitching
is no easier to catch than it is to hit, except that the catcher knows
what's coming.
Your own calculation supports the conclusion: a catcher's hitting is 1/9
of 50% of the game. If pitching is 80% of the other 50%, then the catcher
needs to be only about 1/7 of the worth of the battery to equal his role
on offense. I'd argue that he is much more than that, at least 1/4 to 1/3.
It'll be interesting to see how Greg Maddux does without Charlie O'Brien.
> No question about it. The only catchers I'd rather have right now
> are Piazza and Lopez.
I'd also take Charles Johnson or Sandy Alomar. Before 1995 I'd have added
Ron Karkovice and Tom Pagnozzi.
> BTW - while the Yankees have been attempting to make up for it lately,
> their decision to let Stanley go so that they could trade for Girardi
> and pay him more money has to be the most stupid I've seen this winter.
Easily. I wonder if it was Watson's or Steinbrenner's decision.
Steve
|
88.2513 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Jan 11 1996 09:00 | 37 |
|
>You surprise me, Joe. Of all the people in this notesfile, you are the one
>I would have expected to be familiar with Bill James' work on catching (I
>believe it was also he who first computed catcher's ERA, which STATS, Inc.,
>publishes in its annual statistical compendium). James demonstrated that a
>catcher can make a full run's worth of difference in ERA to his pitchers,
>not only calling the game, but doing all of the things that a good catcher
>does: handling the pitcher, blocking the plate, fielding popups and bunts,
>throwing, and--most importantly--catching the ball. Major League pitching
>is no easier to catch than it is to hit, except that the catcher knows
>what's coming.
I've seen some of it, but I don't remember seeing anything that
conclusively seperated the catcher's performance from the pitcher's
performance. I agree that the stats you mention (which I am familiar
with) do suggest that the catcher makes a significant difference -
but I'm not convinced that they're independant stats.
>Your own calculation supports the conclusion: a catcher's hitting is 1/9
>of 50% of the game. If pitching is 80% of the other 50%, then the catcher
>needs to be only about 1/7 of the worth of the battery to equal his role
>on offense. I'd argue that he is much more than that, at least 1/4 to 1/3.
>It'll be interesting to see how Greg Maddux does without Charlie O'Brien.
Maybe. I agree that it's possible - I'm just not yet convinced.
>> No question about it. The only catchers I'd rather have right now
>> are Piazza and Lopez.
>I'd also take Charles Johnson or Sandy Alomar. Before 1995 I'd have added
>Ron Karkovice and Tom Pagnozzi.
Maybe Charles Johnson, but not for 1996. No way Sandy Alomar (too
fragile).
Joe
|
88.2514 | Bottom line: the Sox got better | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Thu Jan 11 1996 09:27 | 19 |
| I think most people in baseball recognize the importance of a catcher to his
pitchers. Consider Matt Nokes, who hit a ton when he came up but couldn't
hold a job because the pitchers hated throwing to him.
I go with Charles Johnson based on the improvement in his hitting over the
course of the season. He is a remarkably finished catcher at a very early
age, and if he hits as well as he did in the second half, I'd take him over
Piazza right now.
I see your point about Alomar. I'd like to see him stay healthy for a full
season, and I'm not even an Indian fan. But if he is healthy, he's the
best catcher (combining offense and defense) in the American League.
We do seem to agree about Stanley, in any case. A vast improvement over
Macfarlane (who is a competent catcher and who I expected to hit better
than he did in Boston), an excellent pickup for the Red Sox, and a truly
braindead move by the Yankee front office.
Steve
|
88.2515 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Jan 11 1996 09:56 | 23 |
|
>I go with Charles Johnson based on the improvement in his hitting over the
>course of the season. He is a remarkably finished catcher at a very early
>age, and if he hits as well as he did in the second half, I'd take him over
>Piazza right now.
Over Piazza? Why? As I recall (though I could be wrong), Piazza
had a significantly lower catcher's ERA than Hernandez, and is (right
now) a far greater hitter than Johnson.
Long term, Johnson's 2nd or 3rd on my list - he should be a good one.
But for 1996, I'd still rather have Stanley.
>I see your point about Alomar. I'd like to see him stay healthy for a full
>season, and I'm not even an Indian fan. But if he is healthy, he's the
>best catcher (combining offense and defense) in the American League.
But he's never healthy. Never. And his offense has a number of holes,
and his catcher's ERA was significantly higher than Pena's. IMHO,
Alomar's an average catcher - maybe a bit above average. Still, that
puts him near the top of the AL heap.
Joe
|
88.2516 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Jan 11 1996 10:17 | 8 |
| The BoSox just added a bit more power to the lineup in a trade with the Expos
sending Rheal Cormier and a couple prospects for Wil Cordero and a left handed
pitcher. Cordero may have to undergo surgery but Duquette must be confident
it will work out. The feeling is that Cordero will play 2nd base.
Anyone get the pitchers name?
George
|
88.2517 | Stanley plus Cordero == lots of Fenway offense this year | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jan 11 1996 10:52 | 15 |
|
Cordero's my man... looking forward to seeing him play. Basically,
the Sox gave up little to nothing to take on a completely reasonable
salary. Cormier's okay, a competent lefty reliever/swingman and
there aren't many of those. The two prospects are mid-level quality
only.
Duquette is getting the job done again within ever-shrinking budget
constraints. The only move I question is (as others stated)
giving $600K or whatever to Jamie Moyer, who is Grade A stiff
material. But maybe it's remotely possible that Duquette sees
something there. I have no explanation but it's a minor criticism.
glenn
|
88.2518 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ashes to ashes, dust to dust | Thu Jan 11 1996 10:57 | 4 |
| I question the source for Cordero being slated for 2nd base. I doubt
that will be the case. I'd guess Cordero will compete for the 3rd base
job or possibly be used in the outfield. I do think Alicea is best
when used for about 140 games not the full 162.
|
88.2519 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:04 | 10 |
| > I'd guess Cordero will compete for the 3rd base
> job or possibly be used in the outfield.
And how would he do that given his shoulder problem, Bill?
The reason for the switch to 2nd base is simply that it allows for shorter
throws and less wear on the shoulder.
I'd play Cordero at 2nd, Valentin at SS, Naehring at 3rd, and have Alicea sub
for all of them (that is, if he can play 3rd).
|
88.2520 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Can the Coach... | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:09 | 9 |
|
It all depends on Cordero's shoulder, he has a slight tear. He
played winter ball and was okay. He is coming to Boston to be
examined by Pappas to get an update on the injury. They estimate
recover time of about 10 weeks if he has surgury now. Some feel he
can wait until after this season. Just stick him at 2nd base to
shorten his throw to 1st.
Ron
|
88.2521 | No Alicea no div. pennant | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ashes to ashes, dust to dust | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:09 | 7 |
| How do you make a double play with a bad shoulder. Didn't he play ss
last year? If you want to challenge Watson and Steinbrenner for
braindead candidates then replace Alicea for questionable offensive
improvement.
Also, you can't immeadiately depend on National hitting stats when
players move to the Al and especially the east.
|
88.2522 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:12 | 10 |
|
>I'd play Cordero at 2nd, Valentin at SS, Naehring at 3rd, and have Alicea sub
>for all of them (that is, if he can play 3rd).
With Vaughn, that's the best infield in baseball.
I believe the pitcher the Sox received is Bryan Eversgerd, who'll
be 27 next year and if he does anything it will be a surprise.
Joe
|
88.2523 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:14 | 10 |
|
> How do you make a double play with a bad shoulder. Didn't he play ss
> last year? If you want to challenge Watson and Steinbrenner for
> braindead candidates then replace Alicea for questionable offensive
> improvement.
Questionable? Cordero >> Alicea offensively. And he's reasonably
likely to be a decent defensive second baseman.
Joe
|
88.2524 | Sox will find a way... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:23 | 12 |
|
And if he needs time, you can put Cordero (more speed than Greenwell)
out in LF, have him roll the ball into the infield, and move
Greenteeth to DH where he belongs. All assuming the Sox go ahead
with this horrendous laboratory experiment gone awry of putting
Canseco (who does increasingly resemble Frankenstein) out in RF,
of course. After that fails miserably, maybe Cordero can run in RF.
Overall I don't think the defense is going to be pretty but this
team will (ahem, should) hit.
glenn
|
88.2525 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:32 | 5 |
| > And if he needs time, you can put Cordero (more speed than Greenwell)
> out in LF, have him roll the ball into the infield,
This would actually be an improvement on Greenwell's arm...
|
88.2526 | Canseco: can't run, can't throw, can't think-- our man! | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:42 | 12 |
|
>> And if he needs time, you can put Cordero (more speed than Greenwell)
>> out in LF, have him roll the ball into the infield,
>
> This would actually be an improvement on Greenwell's arm...
But which compared to Canseco's (now, after the surgery) looks like
Clemente's. Throw in O'Leary and there's a serious arm strength
problem in the OF (course there was last year too).
glenn
|
88.2527 | Montreal was robbed!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:45 | 9 |
|
Let me be the first Yankee fan to say: Now that was a great trade by
the Blow Sox. Cordero is the real thing. He won't help you much
defensively but he is a hitter!! This may be a three way race after all
in the AL EAst. Especially if Moyer is the player Dan Duquette tells us
he is gonna be.
Chap
|
88.2528 | See, I told you Chappy's cool... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:49 | 1 |
|
|
88.2529 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:51 | 11 |
| Felipe Alou (who knows a little about baseball) made the statement that
Cordero is "a Jeff Bagwell waiting to happen".
How ironic that he's been traded to a team that couldn't wait for a Jeff
Bagwell to happen.
From what I've seen of Cordero, I think he's overstating it some, but Cordero
is absolutely, positively, the real thing. Chappy is right: Cormier +
2 middling prospects for Cordero = robbery.
I will miss Cormier, though - a solid pitcher who never whined.
|
88.2530 | Moyer Moyer he's our man.... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:56 | 9 |
|
Glen - Bite Me.
I don't think he will be in the Bagwell class but maybe a Ron
Gant type hitter.
Chappy
|
88.2531 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jan 11 1996 12:05 | 15 |
|
Jeezus, Chap, it was a compliment. I've just got to remember that
empathizing with the plight of Yankee fans never fails to get me
into trouble. I'm better off just tearing into them.
I don't see the Cordero/Bagwell comparison too much at all. Bagwell
is a much more patient, disciplined hitter, and while he's not a
classic HR hitter, in terms of pure strength, pure power, he's a
"if I get ahold of this pitch it goes 450+ feet" guy. Cordero is
not. But hell, he's a middle infielder by trade. That's versatility.
Bagwell can barely move on defense.
glenn
|
88.2532 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Ashes to ashes, dust to dust | Thu Jan 11 1996 12:10 | 9 |
| Frankenstein,Dracula, House of the Living Dead; horror is the image
that comes to mind at the thought of replacing defense at second base
for the hope of more power. I'd give up a play a week at third for
some power perhaps, I'd give serious thought to Cordero at 1b and
Vaughn at dh for 50 games but no thought to replacing Alicea for anyone
other than a proven defensive second basemand.
Getting Alicea was a masterful move by Duquette (as opposed say to the
luck of Wakefield) I can't believe he could get that stupid so fast.
|
88.2533 | Seeing how we never agreed on anything before!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Jan 11 1996 12:13 | 10 |
|
Oh. Sorry Glen.
I thought I noted a scarce bit of sarcasm in your statement.
Chapp
|
88.2534 | I played much 2B, 3B, but never with "impingement syndrome" | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Jan 11 1996 12:19 | 21 |
|
> Frankenstein,Dracula, House of the Living Dead; horror is the image
> that comes to mind at the thought of replacing defense at second base
> for the hope of more power.
This is true if and only if Cordero indeed cannot throw. The
guy is pretty quick. There may be a learning curve but if the
arm is okay this is nowhere near the disaster of seeing Canseco
stumbling around in RF.
Somehow this will likely fix itself. Jerry will get his way and
Naehring'll get hurt. ;-) And no, it's not generally true that
the 3B needs a stronger arm than at 2B. Not, as billte pointed
out, when the quick hard throw out of the pivot is considered,
which will stress the shoulder more than a full windup from
3B. Many 3B have excelled with downright mediocre, even below
average, arms. Like my boyhood hero Brooks Robinson (converted
2B), for one...
glenn
|
88.2535 | | SHARE::DERRY | Color me impressed... | Thu Jan 11 1996 12:21 | 3 |
| Chappy went to the Joe school of overreacting.
(-: so I don't get told to bite something.
|
88.2536 | | CAM::WAY | Ridi pagliaccio | Thu Jan 11 1996 12:33 | 9 |
| > Chappy went to the Joe school of overreacting.
>
> (-: so I don't get told to bite something.
Guess you won't be calling him zipperhead any time soon.....8^)
Chappy, I told you Glenn was a great guy!
|
88.2537 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Thu Jan 11 1996 13:12 | 4 |
|
Maybe Chappy going for the reverse KOD???????
;^)
|
88.2538 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Jan 11 1996 13:50 | 7 |
| > Cordero is the real thing. He won't help you much
> defensively but he is a hitter!!
What a surprise, Boston sacrificing fielding for hitting.
I thought this Duquette was supposed to be brilliant and represent
a break from past mistakes ??
|
88.2539 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Jan 11 1996 14:06 | 17 |
|
> I thought this Duquette was supposed to be brilliant and represent
> a break from past mistakes ??
I'm not sure about brilliant, but Duquette is a good GM.
But sacrificing fielding for hitting is not, in general, a mistake
(though I'd certainly agree that in situations it can be).
The thing to realize - even if Cordero can't play 2B this year, he's
a good pickup. Even if Cordero can't _ever_ play 2B, he's a good
pickup.
And I'd bet he can play 2B (though, with his injuries, not necessarily
this year).
Joe
|
88.2540 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Thu Jan 11 1996 14:13 | 10 |
|
The radio shows are saying that he is weak on defense and has a
sore arm...if he needs surgery he'll miss the first 10 weeks of the
season...either case they expect him to play second because of the
short throw...guess Aliceia is the backup infielder now....Looks like
Duquette ralizes that he's not going get the pitching he needs this
year so try the Detroit tiger approach and slug your way to a win..
|
88.2541 | Am I the only one that thinks Naerhing is a total stiff | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Thu Jan 11 1996 14:31 | 11 |
|
Naerhing is a stiff. Hurt to much for me just like Sandy Alomar. I
like the pickup. I'd prefer to see him at 3B for the simple fact that
Alicea is much better than Naerhing defensively and Naerhing doesn't
hit enough to make up for it. He had the weakest .300 I've ever seen.
I still say DD will make a move for a real pitcher. Clemens, Gordon
and a iffy Sele is gonna scare nobody. But have to agree with Glen if
this team hits like they can they will score a ton a runs.
Jerry
|
88.2542 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Jan 11 1996 14:53 | 11 |
| Stats Inc's 1995 Scouting Notebook says that Cordero covers a lot of ground
and is good on the double play but gets lazy on routine grounders and makes
throwing errors. They said he has the tools but needs to work on them.
Maybe playing 2nd base will take some pressure off and he'll be able to work
these things out. That is unless he develops Steve Sax disease.
I think it's a worth while gamble. He could become a great hitting middle
infielder. Stats Inc said he has the potential to be an all-star.
George
|
88.2543 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Can the Coach... | Thu Jan 11 1996 15:09 | 9 |
|
Aaron Sele pitched for a week during December down in Florida without
any problems. DD said that Aaron will be going back down to Floria in
a week or two to continue throwing. If everything goes well he should
be ahead of all the other pitchers come February 19th report date
for pitchers and catchers. I still can't believe the start of the
season is March 31st.
Ron
|
88.2544 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Jan 11 1996 15:27 | 9 |
|
Jerry,
While Naehring's health is a reasonable concern, he doesn't hit
an empty .300 - his walks really are valuable. Sure, it would be great
if he hit 30 HR too - but he really does contribute significantly
offensively.
Joe
|
88.2545 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Thu Jan 11 1996 16:14 | 4 |
|
Was the fielding info before or after last season? Still a decent
pickup for the sox...
|
88.2546 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Jan 11 1996 16:16 | 3 |
| The Stats Inc info was before the '95 season.
George
|
88.2547 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Fri Jan 12 1996 08:28 | 5 |
| > While Naehring's health is a reasonable concern, he doesn't hit
> an empty .300 - his walks really are valuable.
I know you're not meaning it this way, but this sounds like "damning with
faint praise"...
|
88.2548 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Jan 12 1996 10:52 | 11 |
| >> I thought this Duquette was supposed to be brilliant and represent
>> a break from past mistakes ??
> I'm not sure about brilliant, but Duquette is a good GM.
> But sacrificing fielding for hitting is not, in general, a mistake
I won't disagree with you JoeH. I just took a 'light' jab at Boston
fans, 'cause the Red Sox have sacrificed fielding for hitting forever.
Despite claims to the contrary, Duquette doesn't appear to be a marked
departure from his predecessors.
|
88.2549 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Jan 12 1996 11:10 | 9 |
|
>I won't disagree with you JoeH. I just took a 'light' jab at Boston
>fans, 'cause the Red Sox have sacrificed fielding for hitting forever.
>Despite claims to the contrary, Duquette doesn't appear to be a marked
>departure from his predecessors.
Add "in that regard", and I agree.
Joe
|
88.2550 | | BABAGI::BAILLIE | | Fri Jan 12 1996 11:33 | 7 |
|
RE: 2541 (i believe thats right) "light .300"
Cordero went over 100 AB last year without an RBI
This too sounds alittle lite !
j.b.
|
88.2551 | This one is BS too, far as I'm concerned... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Jan 12 1996 11:43 | 32 |
|
> While Naehring's health is a reasonable concern, he doesn't hit
> an empty .300 - his walks really are valuable. Sure, it would be great
> if he hit 30 HR too - but he really does contribute significantly
> offensively.
And, in spite of the error totals, by my observation (no stats),
Naehring throws the leather around quite acceptably at 3B. Even
surprisingly so considering his transition from SS.
I don't see that Duquette is sacrificing defense for offense,
longterm. Wil Cordero has a sore arm. BFD. Let's look at the
big picture. The kid's been in the bigs for 3+ years, has hit
well in the bigs, and he's still only _24_ years old. Get him
signed longterm and don't worry about missing 10 weeks. He's a
_talent_. He got every bit as much a buildup coming into the
majors as the Yankees' man Jeter, and deservedly so, as he's
largely backed it up. That's the way you look at a move like
this (Chappy had it right).
The Red Sox have some defensive problems _now_, but Duquette is still
working in rebuilding, stopgap mode. Better to look at the recent
draft picks. Pitching and defense. Athletes. Whether the players
pan out remains very much an open question. But there's been no
conscious strategy to sacrifice defense (and let us all be thankful
nonetheless for the demise of the Lou Gorman method of sacrificing
both offense and defense for "clubhouse presence"-- and with it the
priority heralded by the Nick Cafardos towards merely putting butts
in the seats with "names").
glenn
|
88.2552 | Gonna be a lot of 10-8 games | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | The truth - Syracuse s*cks! | Fri Jan 12 1996 11:50 | 16 |
| First of all, the two prospects, McGuire and Bennett, were among the
top ten minor league prospects the Sox had, just a notch below Nomar
and Trot (if he's still a prospect). Losing these two guys makes a
total of six minor leaguers Duquette has had to give up since the end
of the season.
Now to Cordero. I love his bat, but with him at 2B, the SOx infield
will be the worst it's been defensively since 1964, with Dick Stuart at
1B, Felix Mantilla at 2b, Eddie Bressoud at SS, and a still pretty good
but on the downside of his career Frank Malzone at 3B. The pitchers
are not gonna like taking the mound with the motley group of Naehring,
Valentin, Cordero, and Vaughn behind them. And god forbid, throw in
Greenwell and Canseco at the outfield corners and this could be the
worst defensive team since the 1962 Mets!
NAZZ
|
88.2553 | This "sacrificing prospects" stuff doesn't wash either | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Jan 12 1996 12:10 | 28 |
|
> First of all, the two prospects, McGuire and Bennett, were among the
> top ten minor league prospects the Sox had, just a notch below Nomar
> and Trot (if he's still a prospect).
A couple notches, at least. A notch below Donnie Sadler, too, and
probably a few others. McGuire is a 23-year-old, no speed,
for-average-only hitting 1B. No great loss. At what point do you
stop worrying about a guy being a "prospect" when he's only a
year younger than the established major leaguer with far more talent
and/or potential that you're trading for? You don't worry about it
at all.
> Now to Cordero. I love his bat, but with him at 2B, the SOx infield
> will be the worst it's been defensively since 1964, with Dick Stuart at
> 1B, Felix Mantilla at 2b, Eddie Bressoud at SS, and a still pretty good
> but on the downside of his career Frank Malzone at 3B. The pitchers
> are not gonna like taking the mound with the motley group of Naehring,
> Valentin, Cordero, and Vaughn behind them.
Not even close, Nazz. I would say that only Vaughn is mediocre
to below average on D, and that's at the position where it's most
affordable. The rest is at least reasonable. There should be no
longer be any complaining about Valentin from anyone who's been paying
attention. Now, 100% agreed on the OF; that looks like a disaster.
glenn
|
88.2554 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Cheatin' Cowboys suck!!! | Fri Jan 19 1996 09:38 | 12 |
|
Well you folks won't have Sean McDonough to kick around this year.
Channel 68 asked him to take 60% paycut from the 300K salary he got
last year and he said thanks but no thanks. He's got a 600K contract
with CBS that will probably increase now that he's available to do
more games.
talk about guys getting big money for doing nothing.....
"3 million for a utility infield? I'm in the wrong business"
mike
|
88.2555 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Fri Jan 19 1996 09:49 | 14 |
| I see two scenarios here:
1) Ch. 68 wanted McDonough to stay. *Why* do you offer a guy a 60% pay cut
when he's got so many other things he can do for as much or more money?
You've got no leverage, and his loyalty will only go so far.
2) Ch. 68 wanted McDonough to go. STUPID. Unlike his father, he comes across
as intelligent and fairly unbiased. It's a pleasure listening to him.
And now, you've got the Sox telecasts moving to a new station, probably with
a play-by-play guy you either haven't heard before or don't want to hear.
Not a clever way to maintain your share of the viewers.
Either case indicates to me that the folks who run that station aren't
too swift...
|
88.2556 | | WONDER::REILLY | Sean / Alpha Servers DTN:223-4375 | Fri Jan 19 1996 10:08 | 7 |
|
How about:
3) Channel 68 bit off more than they could chew with the bid
for Red Sox rights, and they don't have the money to pay
Sean.
|
88.2557 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Fri Jan 19 1996 10:10 | 7 |
|
Fairly unbiased???????
I don't think so Tim!!!
|
88.2558 | | CAM::WAY | Dress to the right and cover down | Fri Jan 19 1996 10:35 | 29 |
| The sad part is you'll probably end up with a couple of dweebs now.
Sports channel got rid of Rick Peckham and Gerry Cheevers on their Whalers
telecasts. (Unforunately, that's about all the hockey I can see on a night
when ESPN is not carrying the games. UPN-38 doesn't seem to show the Bruins
much...)
Anyway, these new guys SUCK. One is Darryl Reaugh on color, the other guy is a
dweeb, who sounds like a freaking thesaurus of hockey terms:
Oh-oh, Dineen lost his twig (dropped his stick)
Sanderson carries over the stripe (blue line)
Just 9.8 clicks left (seconds)
Clicks to me means kilometers, so I get all messed up. I'm not into the
Whalers enough to turn down the sound and tune in the radio, so it's pretty
annoying.
How much you wanna bet you get some stiff who says"
Canseco goes to the bat-rack to get new twig...
Sheesh!
|
88.2559 | McDonough Myth similar to Gammons Myth... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | The Immaculate Deflection | Fri Jan 19 1996 10:43 | 18 |
|
> How much you wanna bet you get some stiff who says"
>
> Canseco goes to the bat-rack to get new twig...
This would be Bob Kurtz of NESN. I hope he doesn't get "promoted".
On second thought, I'll probably be watching more NESN than Ch 68
due to my dump-the-cable-for-sat decision, so here's hoping Kurtz
does get promoted...
Of course, billte and I seem to be the only two fans in the New
England area who think that McDonough overreaches his grasp in
his analysis of baseball, which isn't as strong as McDonough
likes to think it is. He can carry on a passable commentary,
though. I won't miss him terribly.
glenn
|
88.2560 | | CAM::WAY | Dress to the right and cover down | Fri Jan 19 1996 10:50 | 1 |
| I miss guys like Curt Gowdy.
|
88.2561 | You can't teach it at Columbia School... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | The Immaculate Deflection | Fri Jan 19 1996 10:53 | 10 |
|
> I miss guys like Curt Gowdy.
Yes. Classic voices of the game, with a flair for the dramatic.
McDonough ain't got it, and never will. He's a technocaster, and
not a particularly good one. Give me Ned Martin, before he cut
back on the booze and got his eyesight back...
glenn
|
88.2562 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | NCAA Baseball Tonight: WSU at UH | Fri Jan 19 1996 11:00 | 3 |
| The online USA Today was reporting (yesterday?) that the
Red Sox are considering signing Strawberry ? Can any of you guys
in New England tell me if that's so ?
|
88.2563 | Don't let the door hit you on the way out, Sean | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Fri Jan 19 1996 11:20 | 14 |
| Rich in a word, the consideration was put on hold. Sounds more like
the agent was interested and DD didn't give an unequivecol NO hench
"interest".
A minor league contract has not been totally ruled out. I also suspect
that the "interest" leaked before KK could get his "not interested" in.
DD loves bargains and no one knows for sure that the guy is washed up.
Sean, take Montgomery with you. And I never liked Gowdy either. Give
me Johnny Most who never took a broadcasting course or tip in his life.
The three mentioned had the one quality that kills: dullness.
|
88.2564 | Classic, but bad, and now requires a bib 'n diapers... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | The Immaculate Deflection | Fri Jan 19 1996 11:25 | 9 |
|
> Sean, take Montgomery with you. And I never liked Gowdy either. Give
> me Johnny Most who never took a broadcasting course or tip in his life.
I'm not going to go that far. For example, the post-blindness Harry
Caray is terrible, an obnoxious, slobbering shill...
glenn
|
88.2565 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Jan 19 1996 11:42 | 20 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2554 by CNTROL::CHILDS "Cheatin' Cowboys suck!!!" >>>
> "3 million for a utility infield? I'm in the wrong business"
Everyone even remotely connected with sports is in the wrong business. Jannet
Jackson just signed a deal for $80,000,000 to make 4 albums. And Speilberg is
still making something like %150,000,000 a year for running around filming
things with his camera.
RE Ch 68:
Channel 68 has been bought by Boston University. B.U. recently cut back
their budget and no longer will cough up the $400 a class for a Teaching
Assistant in most computer science classes so I'm not surprised that they won't
pay an announcer $600,000.
Most likely some work study communications student will end up doing it for
minimum wage.
George
|
88.2566 | Get real. Get serious. | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Fri Jan 19 1996 11:51 | 6 |
|
>> Most likely some work study communications student will end
>> up doing it for minimum wage.
I'm sure the sponsors will come flocking to that and 68 will
recoup their investment in no time.
|
88.2567 | Duquette wants to have it both ways | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Be well, Marcus | Fri Jan 19 1996 12:13 | 17 |
| Today's rumor du jour for the Red Sox:
A big trade with Philadelphia. The principals:
TO BOSTON: RP Heathcliff Slocomb
TO PHILLY: CF Lee Tinsley; RP Ken Ryan; OF Glenn Murray
This seems to me like a panic move by Duquette. Either he believes in
the farm system or he doesn't. He gives it lip service, but keeps
bringing in old guys. Slocomb is about 30, and was a journeyman until
lasted year when he became a closer and had a great first half. He was
average in the second half, but did finish with 32 saves.
Tinsley is the Sox best defensive outfielder, Murray was the top
prospect at Pawtucket, and Ryan we all know about.
NAZZ
|
88.2568 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Fri Jan 19 1996 12:13 | 5 |
|
Yup, I thought of that and forgot to put it in. Same theme... incompetence.
Ch. 68 is WABU, owned by Boston University, correct? Wouldn't that put
self-proclaimed genius John Silber in charge, either directly or indirectly?
|
88.2569 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Jan 19 1996 12:56 | 19 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2568 by IMBETR::DUPREZ "The engineer formerly known as Roland" >>>
>Ch. 68 is WABU, owned by Boston University, correct? Wouldn't that put
>self-proclaimed genius John Silber in charge, either directly or indirectly?
Yes, B.U. bought Ch 68 a couple years ago. Some religious organization had
tried to make a go of it for a few years but it didn't work out so now it
belongs to B.U. who's president is John Silber.
Tommy's right, if they don't get top talent it will hurt advertising revenue
but it's not clear that making a profit is WABUs #1 priority. If they can
break even providing educational opportunities for their students that would
not be entirely inconsistent with the goal of a major University.
Of course whether or not it's consistent with the goals of the Red Sox is
another question, but most Red Sox fans are pretty savvy and as long as we can
see the action we don't need an announcer telling us what's going on.
George
|
88.2570 | | CAM::WAY | Dress to the right and cover down | Fri Jan 19 1996 13:07 | 10 |
| First off, what about WSBK-38? Do they no longer carry the Sox?
Second off, Gowdy was one of the best. Lindsey Nelson was no slouch either.
Grew up with Ken Coleman, Ned Martin, and Johnny Pesky on the Sox radio
network.
Glenn Murray already plays for the Penguins, and Jerry Heath tells me the rap
on him is he can't score....8^)
|
88.2571 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Jan 19 1996 13:39 | 16 |
| I like Sean McDonough. While the comment about Red Sox announcers being
"dull" is remarkably true and consistent, I think McDonough is less dull
than the others. He can be humorous, and always calls it as he sees it
(ie: commentary from a play-by-play guy, what a novel concept !).
Sorry Glenn, but Ned Martin put me to sleep. If I wasn't watching the
tube, some times I had to run into the room to see if there were audio
difficulties (ie: too much dead space).
re: rumored trade
If Slocum has turned the corner and can be productive, this is a decent
trade for Boston. They're really not giving up much of anything. Tinsley
is a part-time player, at best, Ryan is a bust, and Murray (from what
I've seen of him at Pawtucket) is not a major prospect (despite big #s).
|
88.2572 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Jan 19 1996 13:41 | 40 |
|
> Today's rumor du jour for the Red Sox:
>
> A big trade with Philadelphia. The principals:
>
> TO BOSTON: RP Heathcliff Slocomb
> TO PHILLY: CF Lee Tinsley; RP Ken Ryan; OF Glenn Murray
>
> This seems to me like a panic move by Duquette. Either he believes in
> the farm system or he doesn't. He gives it lip service, but keeps
> bringing in old guys.
It doesn't at all strike me this way. He brings in cheap players to
fill gaps, yes, but doesn't trade away his real prospects.
> Slocomb is about 30, and was a journeyman until
> lasted year when he became a closer and had a great first half.
Actually, he's been a very good pitcher the past two years. Not
great, but at age 29 there's no reason to rule out a significant
career as a closer. I wouldn't _count_ on it, but it's not beyond
the realm of possibility. Just look at Doug Jones, and Slocumb
has better stuff...
> Tinsley is the Sox best defensive outfielder, Murray was the top
> prospect at Pawtucket, and Ryan we all know about.
1) Tinsley is completely replacable. You can play Tinsley, or Hosey,
or Cuyler, or pick up someone like Alex Diaz; none of them will
significantly effect the team.
2) Murray is 25, and has never shown significant production in the
minors. He wouldn't be a bad fourth outfielder, but he's not
the solution to any Sox problem.
3) While Ryan could succeed, Slocumb's a much more likely candidate.
It's a deal I'd make.
Joe
|
88.2573 | | CAM::WAY | Dress to the right and cover down | Fri Jan 19 1996 13:48 | 20 |
| I can't remember if it was Mel Allen or Red Barber but one of them said that in
the days of radio, he'd keep an egg timer in front of him. Every time it ran
out, he'd give the score.
That to me is a key thing for s sportscaster. They'd better keep the people
informed, first and foremost.
Recently I sent some mail to NBC Sports, and told them I thought they'd
improve their football coverage if they put the score up in the corner, so that
a viewer could always know what the score was, the time remaining etc.
They replied
"we're not going to do that. It's just a FOX gimmick"
Guess ESPN and ABC didn't feel that way....
'Saw
|
88.2574 | Ken Ryan is highly aggravating; Tinsley's marginal | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | The Immaculate Deflection | Fri Jan 19 1996 13:51 | 12 |
|
> It's a deal I'd make.
No kidding. Nazz, why do you have it in for Duquette? The correct
criticism here, if there is one, is that Duquette took a flier on
Glenn Murray a couple years back and blew $500K on him. Peter
Gammons immediately fell totally in love with the guy, and while
it was probably an acceptable gamble, it's true that Murray had
never really done anything to that point.
glenn
|
88.2575 | I mean I liked Chris Schenkel | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Fri Jan 19 1996 14:17 | 11 |
|
>Second off, Gowdy was one of the best. Lindsey Nelson was no slouch
>either.
>
>Grew up with Ken Coleman, Ned Martin, and Johnny Pesky on the Sox radio
>network.
I like them all, especially Lindsey Nelson with the exception of Gowdy.
But this has to be the ultimate taste test.
|
88.2576 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Fri Jan 19 1996 14:22 | 4 |
|
It would be a good trade for the Sox. Tinsley does not impress me
neither does Ryan.
|
88.2577 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Fri Jan 19 1996 14:43 | 11 |
| The only guy of the three I'd hate to lose would be Tinsley, but it's only
because of his defensive value. I have no delusions of him being the be-all
and end-all in center field.
I'm not totally sold on Slocumb, but I'd sure make the deal. And my next
deal would be for some center field depth (such as the aforementioned Alex
Diaz, who can throw some leather).
I want the trade to go through simply because I've been dying to bid on a
name like Heathcliff Slocumb in my Rotisserie draft. I think I'd overpay
just to have the name on my roster...
|
88.2578 | | CSLALL::BRULE | country in need of a leader | Fri Jan 19 1996 14:56 | 8 |
| It's a deal I'd make. DD has traded a few minor leaguers but the only
one who I think they considered a top prospect is Rodriguez and maybe
McGuire (who was 9 months younger then Cordero). If he starts dealing
the Suppans, Garciapara's and Sadlers then you might have an argumnent.
As far as Slocumb is concerned he still has at least 5 years left in
him.
Mike
|
88.2579 | This trade may be a gamble worth taking, but .... | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Be well, Marcus | Fri Jan 19 1996 15:00 | 13 |
| I'd probably make the deal, too, but I am really tired of the
completely free ride Duquette gets around here from the fans and
especially the media. He came in saying how the only way to win was to
build through the farm system, and that he was going to concentrate and
signing and keeping draft choices. Then he deals away no fewer than
eight prospects (of varying ability levels, of course) in the course of
a year, and nobody says a peep. He started out saying that the team
needed to upgrade its speed and defense at every level of the
organization, but has completely abandoned that stance. This guy has
no real position on anything except what's expedient, and no one ever
seriously questions his moves.
NAZZ
|
88.2580 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Jan 19 1996 15:26 | 21 |
| Well he may be starting at a lower level in the farm system. Most of the guys
he's been trading away have been at the AAA level.
Seems if you really wanted to build a farm system the way to do it would be
to overhaul the scouting staff then try to get really young guys at the A ball
level and let them work their way up.
When I look at the guys he's giving away, I just don't see the types of guys
that put up 100 wins in AA ball the way the Chipper Jones group did for the
Braves nor do I see the types of guys that hit the majors and have an impact.
Some of them are OK but not that great.
One report said that the Phillies started the discussion looking for a
starting pitcher and had Aaron Sele in mind but by the end of the discussion
they were talking about Red Sox subs.
Anyway the real test of Dan Duquette is not so much in hanging on to guys
like Mosley and Ryan, the real test will be to see what comes up from A ball
over the next few years.
George
|
88.2581 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Fri Jan 19 1996 15:45 | 4 |
| Murray and Tinsley were not prospects they were picked up for small
dollars. Ryan I am personally still high on and feel he'd be going to
the right team and league but he isn't going to make it with KK and the
Boston environment.
|
88.2582 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Jan 19 1996 15:54 | 28 |
|
Nazz,
I don't think Duquette's getting a free ride. I think his signing of
Moyer was, frankly, silly at best; I couldn't see the Agulera deal
either, but I don't know as much of Rodriguez as the Sox do.
But in general, most of the moves Duquette has made have made sense.
> He came in saying how the only way to win was to
> build through the farm system, and that he was going to concentrate and
> signing and keeping draft choices. Then he deals away no fewer than
> eight prospects (of varying ability levels, of course) in the course of
> a year, and nobody says a peep.
So? Building through the farm system isn't inconsistent with weeding
out the system, particularly when it gets you better players.
> This guy has
> no real position on anything except what's expedient, and no one ever
> seriously questions his moves.
IMHO, his position is to build a winner for the long term while
providing a decent team in the short term. Nearly every deal he's
made has been consistent with these goals.
Joe
|
88.2583 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Jan 19 1996 16:24 | 3 |
| If Frankie Rodriguez becomes a 20-game winner, me thinks DD will get
some heat. These are the type of deals GMs/owners die with (eg:
Anderson for Bagwell, Phelps for Buhner, Alexander for Smoltz).
|
88.2584 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Jan 19 1996 16:35 | 18 |
|
> These are the type of deals GMs/owners die with (eg:
> Anderson for Bagwell,
This is one Gorman should receive heat for; a top, young
_hitting_ prospect is very unlikely to seriously regress.
> Phelps for Buhner,
Not as bad a trade as the above, but still far from a deal
I'd want to see made.
> Alexander for Smoltz).
Now this is another matter. Pitchers are unpredictable; trading
Smoltz was _not_, IMHO, a bad deal in this case.
Joe
|
88.2585 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Jan 19 1996 17:32 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2584 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
> [Bagwell] is one Gorman should receive heat for; a top, young
> _hitting_ prospect is very unlikely to seriously regress.
That wasn't a factor. The Sox were almost in the playoffs and Gorman was
willing to trade away a potential future star for a World Series win right
then. And if it had worked and they got to the World Series and won very
few people would be complaining about Bagwell today.
George
|
88.2586 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Jan 22 1996 08:42 | 29 |
|
George,
>> [Bagwell] is one Gorman should receive heat for; a top, young
>> _hitting_ prospect is very unlikely to seriously regress.
> That wasn't a factor. The Sox were almost in the playoffs and Gorman was
>willing to trade away a potential future star for a World Series win right
>then. And if it had worked and they got to the World Series and won very
>few people would be complaining about Bagwell today.
IMHO, you should almost _never_ trade a Bagwell-level prospect. If
that was the best Gorman could do, he can't have been trying too hard -
decent right handed middle relief pitchers aren't that hard to find.
Even the Tribe's pickup during this past season - Bell for Hill - is
iffy, even though Hill's a starter and Bell isn't as good a prospect
as Bagwell was.
The only time I might trade a Bagwell would be if I had an old team
(thus the added benefit of a Bagwell in the next few years wouldn't
matter as much), and a franchise that needed a boost (Seattle this
past season, or the like).
The odds were very good that Bagwell would be a good player. The odds
that Anderson would make the difference for the Red Sox, OTOH, can't
have been nearly as high.
Joe
|
88.2587 | Scouting was cut wat back at the time. | CSLALL::BRULE | country in need of a leader | Mon Jan 22 1996 08:50 | 7 |
| Joe,
The biggest problem was that Lou (and his farm Director) didn't think
that Bagwell was a top talent. The Astros asked originally for Cooper
but then turned to Bagwell when the Sox balked. Hobson who was
Bagwell's manager at the time was really upset that the Sox dealt him.
Mike
|
88.2588 | Another example of the Duquette free ride | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Be well, Marcus | Mon Jan 22 1996 10:53 | 7 |
| Can you imagine the heat Lou Gorman would be getting if he were still
the GM and said that he was looking into bringing Darryl Strawberry to
Boston?!?!?!? The talk shows would be going wild, the fans would be
livid, the press would be screaming, but with our buddy Dan, the most
violent disagreement I've heard is that Darryl wouldn't fit in.
NAZZ
|
88.2589 | | CAM::WAY | Dress to the right and cover down | Wed Jan 24 1996 07:44 | 25 |
| >
> Can you imagine the heat Lou Gorman would be getting if he were still
> the GM and said that he was looking into bringing Darryl Strawberry to
> Boston?!?!?!? The talk shows would be going wild, the fans would be
> livid, the press would be screaming, but with our buddy Dan, the most
> violent disagreement I've heard is that Darryl wouldn't fit in.
>
Perhaps some folks are just shaking their head in disbelief (like me)
QUESTION:
Now that Boston has moved it's AA affiliated OUT of New Britain
(dumb move Dan) where is it?
Meantime, progress on the new stadium at Willowbrook Park in
New Britain is going well, and the new place should be gorgeous!
I go by at least three times a week on Route 9, and the highway
overlooks the little valley that the park is in so you get quite
a nice view. The grandstand will be impressive compared to
old Beehive Field....
'Saw
|
88.2591 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Wed Jan 24 1996 08:27 | 7 |
| > Now that Boston has moved it's AA affiliated OUT of New Britain
> (dumb move Dan) where is it?
Trenton. Brand new ballpark, lots of town support. I'd like it if they
were closer, but that's the way it goes.
Did they start on the new stadium *before* the Sox left town?
|
88.2592 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Jan 24 1996 09:00 | 24 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2590 by SHARE::DERRY "Color me impressed..." >>>
> I just heard that Bob Montgomery was let go...
The Globe had that as well. Remy will now be working color on both NESN and
68. With both season and preseason he'll be working something like 175 games.
Alex Cole
Valintine
Mo
Jose
Greenwell
:
Stanley
:
Cordero
/set dream mode on
Maybe trade Naehring and someone for an all-star right fielder.
/set dream mode off
Anyway, things are shaping up.
George
|
88.2593 | | CAM::WAY | Dress to the right and cover down | Wed Jan 24 1996 09:05 | 28 |
| >
>Trenton. Brand new ballpark, lots of town support. I'd like it if they
>were closer, but that's the way it goes.
>
>Did they start on the new stadium *before* the Sox left town?
Construction, no. Was it in the works? Yes.
From what I understand, Duquette wanted them out of NB no matter what, and
the supposed reason was that he wanted them in Springfield.
Buzas, the owner of the franchise, was completely un-Modell-like when he kept
the franchise in the town, and switched affiliation to the twins.
While I'm not into the name "Hardware City Rock Cats" it does make for
good merchandising sales.
The main thing for me is that there are THREE AA franchises in the area:
New Haven, Norwich and New Britain, and it makes for some GREAT rivalries and
games. Personally, I think that Duquette blew this one.
With the Yankees farm team in Norwich, having the Sox in New Britain was just
too cool.
'Saw
|
88.2594 | but Dan's a genius... ???? | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Jan 24 1996 09:15 | 10 |
| >With the Yankees farm team in Norwich, having the Sox in New Britain was just
>too cool.
I hadn't heard of this move. It really is amazing that the parent club
would abandon a minor league town in their region (ie: New England).
It was just the opposite situation when the Yanks AA affiliate wanted
to move to Suffolk (Long Island) and the Mets had a bird, claimed
territorial rights and blocked it. They then went to Norwich, and
with them less than 2 hours away I'll be taking in some games every
year.
|
88.2595 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Wed Jan 24 1996 09:34 | 4 |
| >While I'm not into the name "Hardware City Rock Cats" it does make for
>good merchandising sales.
I keep expecting Brian Setzer to do the National Anthem...
|
88.2596 | | CAM::WAY | Dress to the right and cover down | Wed Jan 24 1996 09:59 | 25 |
| Joe,
Lots of folks around here were disappointed.
The Red Sox had a long history in the central CT area. As you know, they were
in Bristol, and then moved to New Britain in the early 80s.
Douquette came along, and next thing you know, they're gone. I really think
he wanted them in Mass (Springfield), but somehow that didn't work out.
Joe Buzas, the owner of the club, decided NOT to move the club. I think that
was a GREAT decision on his part. The stadium in New Britain is easy to
get to (right off Route 9) and is in a decent area. The tickets aren't priced
out of reach, and with New Haven (about 25-30 minutes south) and Norwich (say
40 minutes east) it sets up some GREAT baseball for CT.
Duquette was stupid.
The Rock Cats are affiliated with the Twins now.
Roland,
I don't know who does the anthem....8^)
|
88.2597 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Jan 24 1996 10:00 | 8 |
| Compared to some other clubs, having AA Trenton and AAA Pawtucket, the Sox
are probably closer to their two top minor league cities than many if not
most organizations.
Imagine what it was like for the Marlins their 1st year with the AAA club
in Edmonton.
George
|
88.2598 | If more traditionalists would buy tickets... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | The Immaculate Deflection | Wed Jan 24 1996 10:09 | 15 |
|
The basic problem for the Red Sox with New Britain was Beehive
Field. I thought the place was fairly cool but people were
staying away in droves. Tradition or no tradition with the Red
Sox in CT, attendance was terrible.
I'm almost certain that this new stadium deal was not in place
at the time the Red Sox made their decision. Because the Sox made
their decision before Buzas made his (Buzas made his the day after
we went to that game with your Dad, 'Saw), and I don't think NB
was going to commit to a ballpark with no minor-league franchise
committed to be in place.
glenn
|
88.2599 | | CAM::WAY | Dress to the right and cover down | Wed Jan 24 1996 10:11 | 20 |
| > I'm almost certain that this new stadium deal was not in place
> at the time the Red Sox made their decision. Because the Sox made
> their decision before Buzas made his (Buzas made his the day after
> we went to that game with your Dad, 'Saw), and I don't think NB
> was going to commit to a ballpark with no minor-league franchise
> committed to be in place.
That may be so, but, New Britain and the surrounding area had always supported
them.
Could it be the fact that the farm team sucked was keeping people away? 8^)
Granted, the stadium was NOT what it was when it opened. When Beehive field
opened up, it was a great place. Age, and better facilities elsewhere helped
do it in.
The new place looks like it is going to be great. I'm glad Buzas stayed.
|
88.2600 | As I recall they won, in exciting, dramatic fashion... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | The Immaculate Deflection | Wed Jan 24 1996 10:21 | 9 |
|
> Could it be the fact that the farm team sucked was keeping people away? 8^)
Are you saying that Patrick "The Felon" Lennon and Jose "Which Way"
Malave "sucked"? Is that what you're saying? ;-)
glenn
|
88.2601 | | CAM::WAY | Dress to the right and cover down | Wed Jan 24 1996 10:39 | 11 |
| > Are you saying that Patrick "The Felon" Lennon and Jose "Which Way"
> Malave "sucked"? Is that what you're saying? ;-)
Well, they did win. But on the whole, they sucked. That's what I'm saying....
8^)
|
88.2602 | | CAM::WAY | When can their glory fade? | Mon Jan 29 1996 10:42 | 53 |
| Okay, I'm looking for a volunteer..
In speaking with Hawk yesterday on the phone, he asked who was running the
Patriots Day Red Sox game this year. I told him no one that I knew of...
Now, last year, thanks to the crybaby baseball players and obstinate owners, we
didn't have a Pats Day deal for the firsted time in years.
True veterans of these great occasions will remember such highlights as
o Da Baffroom Olympics
o A truly drunk and disorderly Chainsaw ranking simulateneously
on a group of 12-year old hockey players from Mefaa, and a
group of propeller heads from MIT.
o A truly drunk and disordely Chainsaw calling Kevin Romine
a waste of skin (well, Milawaukee was ahead 17-0 at the time)
o Casey and Dickstah sucking face.
o JD and Marky Mark Lufay having a posedown for some Japanese
schoolgirls (or was that at Tigermania)
o JIm dInsMOre name-tags (or was that at Tigermania)
o The Dinz wearing a "Cam Neely is GOD(tm)" T-shirt.
o Dr. Midnight proposing to Karen Derry.
o Da Ninj, John Hendry, destroying beach balls wif his teef.
I can't organize this thing this year. Can someone in here? There's only
TWO thing you have to do:
1. Order the tickets
2. Don't lose them.
There are such other ancillary tasks as
1. Ordering five for Hawk's group
2. Collecting money from us
Who's gonna do it?
'Saw
|
88.2603 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | I've always been a closet Steeler fan - even though they suck! | Mon Jan 29 1996 11:25 | 2 |
88.2604 | | CAM::WAY | When can their glory fade? | Mon Jan 29 1996 12:39 | 5 |
| > What did Dr M propose, that he could school Karen in hoop?
>
I don't think school or hope had anything to do with it...8^)
|
88.2605 | Okay, I'll do it, the Pats Day | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Feb 01 1996 10:43 | 25 |
|
> In speaking with Hawk yesterday on the phone, he asked who was running the
> Patriots Day Red Sox game this year. I told him no one that I knew of...
Okay, I'll run the Pats Day affair, even though I don't officially
have the day off. This year the game is on April 15 (I guess that
means MA residents have until April 16 to file), against-- dare I
even mention this?-- THE CLEVELAND INDIANS. That's right folks,
no more Milwaukee Brewers, no more Chicago White Sox, but the mighty
CLEVELAND INDIANS.
Send me mail that you're definitely in, and then shortly thereafter a
check, for $9 per ticket (Sox made a $1 increase over last year), to
my home address (22 Davis Village Rd, New Ipswich NH 03071). If I
get _any_ annoying Indians' junk mail at my home address, I'm going
straight to personnel... ;-).
I'm thinking that if we make a deadline for this thing of Feb 15 (last
call for season-ticket renewals), I might even be able to get the
seats up in CF (where my seats are), so that you can actually see the
game (or would that detract from the Pats' Day tradition, being able
to see home plate and not just Kevin Romine's shapely butt?)
glenn
|
88.2606 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Can the Coach... | Thu Feb 01 1996 10:55 | 8 |
|
Glenn,
I can send you a nice Indians napkin from Jacobs field
that Groaner left on my desk. :^) I might even include the nice
little caption he left with it.
Ron
|
88.2607 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Feb 01 1996 11:17 | 9 |
|
Okay, I sent mail about Pats' Day to basically everyone in the region
with an Internet address listed in 82.375. Any of the other regular
suspects need to be contacted by close friends/relatives, by phone or
letter bomb (I've already got Hawk in for the 5, though, and Mike
Leary's taken care of).
glenn
|
88.2608 | Awright!!! | CAM::WAY | When can their glory fade? | Thu Feb 01 1996 11:21 | 13 |
| CF is fine by me. That's where we were for Opening Day two years ago, when
I brought my dad....Great seats!
'Saw
PS Thank you Glenn. (And for Chappy's benefit) I'm sure you'll run a fine
Patriots Day game, with no possibility of us needing vouchers. You
do a good job with everything.....
PPS We meet at the Rat at around 9am....8^)
|
88.2609 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Feb 01 1996 12:18 | 3 |
|
Dooooooooooooooooop!!
|
88.2610 | | CAM::WAY | When can their glory fade? | Thu Feb 01 1996 13:34 | 4 |
| > Dooooooooooooooooop!!
;^)
|
88.2611 | Boston the favorite in '96 | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Feb 06 1996 13:46 | 3 |
| The Idiot (aka Steinbrenner) is doing his best to put attention/pressure
on Boston. In today's USA Today he says the Red Sox are the favorites
in '96.
|
88.2612 | Steinblender telling it like it is, in this case... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Wed Feb 07 1996 15:11 | 12 |
|
> The Idiot (aka Steinbrenner) is doing his best to put attention/pressure
> on Boston. In today's USA Today he says the Red Sox are the favorites
> in '96.
Well, fact is, the Sox ain't looking half-bad. There are and should
be high expectations, i.e. a reasonable shot at repeating the
division championship. "On paper" they are a better team than in
1995, but of course the 1995 crew played over its head.
glenn
|
88.2613 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY!! | Wed Feb 07 1996 17:23 | 6 |
| Well, Steinbrenner's comments only make it doubly tough being a Sox
fan. If we don't win the world series again, the pain continues. Even
if we do win, the pain of knowing Steinbrenner was right will surely
throw the world into an off-kilter spin.
|
88.2614 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 12 1996 08:27 | 7 |
| Well baseball season is under way. According to the Boston Globe the truck
with the bats, balls, and other equipment left Fenway park for Florida Friday.
Pitchers and catchers are about to report and the 1st spring game against
Boston College is about 3 weeks away.
PLAY BALL!!!
George
|
88.2615 | Will Fenway be snowbound on Opening Day? | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Feb 12 1996 09:21 | 5 |
| > PLAY BALL!!!
Music to my ears.
Steve
|
88.2616 | | SALEM::DODA | Spring training, PLEASE! | Mon Feb 12 1996 12:05 | 1 |
| Amen! Leaving for Ft. Myers on 3/7...
|
88.2617 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Feb 16 1996 08:12 | 7 |
| Looks like Mo Vaughn will be wearing a Red Sox uniform for some time to come.
The local Boston stations are reporting that he inked a multi year deal that
will put him in the top 10 salary wise for baseball players.
Get out the check books Cleveland, Albert Bell is not going to come cheap.
George
|
88.2618 | Things change fast | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Fri Feb 16 1996 09:34 | 5 |
| Any more details on Mo's signing? The last report on CNN International
yesterday evening was that talks between him and the Sox had broken down
and he was going to arbitration.
Steve
|
88.2619 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Feb 16 1996 11:45 | 4 |
| On the news they said he signed after midnight and that details would be
released at a press conference some time today.
George
|
88.2620 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | iceMAN - 1995 SPORTS NOTY Winner | Fri Feb 16 1996 17:35 | 3 |
88.2621 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY!! | Fri Feb 16 1996 20:45 | 9 |
| Bell doesn't have the tools to carry a team. He's got enough other
baggage to tote around. He's in a good situation being surrounded by
other good players. If you swapped his situation with a Frank Thomas
or another good/great player without much support, Bell's numbers
wouldn't be nearly as good as they were. Perhaps '95 was Albert's
career year...only time will tell. That baggage cost him the MVP.
It's probably just as well as far as the Cleveland franchise is
concerned. If he doesn't pout about it, he may be more focussed and
have an even better year in '96.
|
88.2622 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Harry Browne for President! | Sun Feb 18 1996 08:56 | 13 |
|
50 homers and 50 doubles never been done before in the history of the
game and this guy doesn't have the tools? hahahaaaa As a friend of mine
and I were discussing the other day, in 20 years people will still be
talking about Albert's accomplishments last year while Mo's will be
remembered as a fine season but certainly nothing that hasn't been done
before.
Albert Belle was the MVP last year except for some jackass writers who
showed their lack of maturity with their voting.............
mike
|
88.2623 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | From BK>>Dean to BK>>TO | Mon Feb 19 1996 06:45 | 8 |
| > 50 homers and 50 doubles never been done before in the history of the
> game and this guy doesn't have the tools? hahahaaaa As a friend of mine
> and I were discussing the other day, in 20 years people will still be
> talking about Albert's accomplishments last year while Mo's will be
> remembered as a fine season but certainly nothing that hasn't been done
> before.
ALbert Belle and Hack Wilson.
|
88.2624 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Feb 19 1996 08:17 | 10 |
|
???
Did the sportwriters miss someone? It's not that hard to go through
50 HR seasons; I was reasonably certain Belle was the first to hit 50
HR and 50 2B in the same season...
I'd _still_ take Tim Salmon as my MVP, but that's just me...
Joe
|
88.2626 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | From BK>>Dean to BK>>TO | Mon Feb 19 1996 08:20 | 4 |
| I wasn't saying Hack Wilson was a 50-50 guy (although I certainly
wasn't clear as to what I was saying). More that they could be
compared and talked about sportswriters in a similar vein regarding
a great regular season vs postseason play.
|
88.2627 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 19 1996 08:22 | 8 |
| Mr Snappy was the clear MVP. No offensive player can carry a team, that's
something only a pitcher can do.
Speaking of pitching, PITCHERS AND CATCHERS REPORT TODAY!!!
IT'S BASEBALL SEASON, PLAY BALL!!!!
George
|
88.2628 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Feb 19 1996 08:26 | 6 |
|
Re Hack Wilson
Ah, I see.
Joe
|
88.2629 | I'm for the everyday player | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Feb 19 1996 10:11 | 16 |
| Re Mr. Snappy: I don't see. A starting pitcher goes out there one day in
five, and even if he is as thoroughly dominant as Johnson and Maddux were,
he produces only 20 of the 90 wins you need on average to win a division.
That's why I will support a starting pitcher for MVP only in very rare
cases.
I don't agree, however, that Albert Belle carried the Indians. There were
simply too many major contributors to make that claim. My choice for the
MVP was Edgar Martinez, FWIW.
BTW, isn't today a holiday in the States? My Far Side Desk Calendar says
it's Presidents' Day. What are you all doing in here? Get a life, you
guys !!! ;*)
Steve
|
88.2630 | been in Europe too long... | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Feb 19 1996 10:18 | 5 |
| >BTW, isn't today a holiday in the States? My Far Side Desk Calendar says
>it's Presidents' Day. What are you all doing in here? Get a life, you
>guys !!! ;*)
Get Presidents Day off ??? We aren't government employees...
|
88.2631 | Now I understand. Thanks, Joe. | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Feb 19 1996 10:26 | 15 |
| Yeah, been in Europe too long. I remember getting either Washington's or
Lincoln's Birthday off school, but now I think of it, I might have had to
go to work. But a colleague called the consulate today and got a recording
that said they were closed on "German and American holidays". Well, today
is Rosenmontag (Rose Monday), the prelude to Faschingsdienstag (Shrove
Tuesday, in French Mardi Gras), and Rosenmontag is a sort of holiday in
the Rhineland, but not Bavaria. Then I checked it out on my desk
calendar, and everything fell into place, or so I thought.
As far as I know, there is no holiday over here that government employees
get but we in the private sector don't. Hence my confusion.
Carry on.
Steve
|
88.2632 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 19 1996 10:33 | 35 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2629 by MUNDIS::SSHERMAN "Clean living and a fast outfield" >>>
>Re Mr. Snappy: I don't see. A starting pitcher goes out there one day in
>five, and even if he is as thoroughly dominant as Johnson and Maddux were,
>he produces only 20 of the 90 wins you need on average to win a division.
It's true a pitcher is only out there one every 4.5 games or so but the
difference between games won by a great pitcher versus the AAA and bull pen
slugs that would pitch if he was not there is greater than games won by a great
slugger and the average hitter that would be playing if he was not there.
If a great pitcher wins 20 games, the slugs would probably only win 5 or 6
of those games. That's about 14 or 15 games different.
If a great hitter generates 90 more runs than the average hitter that would
replace him, that's probably not 14 games.
- Figure about half the runs were created in games they won anyway now
you're down to 45.
- If 1/3 of those were close games now your down to 15 times the hitter
tied up a game they would have lost.
- Now cut that in half and that's about 7 games they won because the slugger
was around.
Mileage may vary depending on what formula you use but Bill James once showed
the same thing using his Runs Created formula and a formula that turned runs
into expected games won. He actually came out with the hitter only making a
difference of 5 or 6 games so I'm being a bit more generous.
Anyway, the conclusion was that as individual players go, a single pitcher is
about twice as valuable as a single hitter. The MVP should always be a pitcher.
George
|
88.2633 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Mon Feb 19 1996 10:36 | 20 |
| Actually, it's like this.
Some companies give their employees certain holidays. They tend to be
companies who have seen the light and realize that an employee with good morale
tends to be more productive than an employee with poor morale.
Granted, that's not something these management types can see in a bottom line,
but then again, depth of thought is not something the management type species
is usually capable of.
I've worked at companies were they had Presidents Day AND Columbus Day off.
It was kind of nice.
Digital is really the first place I've worked where they have a dearth of
holidays. But it could be worse....
That stretch between New Years Day and Memorial Day is, as they say
in Maine, as pissah!
8^)
|
88.2634 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Feb 19 1996 10:37 | 5 |
| >As far as I know, there is no holiday over here that government employees
>get but we in the private sector don't. Hence my confusion.
You guys get so many "holidays" over there...you make us look like we're
actually working hard !
|
88.2635 | Responding to topic and rathole | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Feb 19 1996 11:04 | 22 |
| Compared to Europeans, you *are* working hard. You put in more hours on
more days, and (because of the extensive "social safety net") you cost
less, too. Amazingly, few if any of the European labor unions or works
councils have figured out that their workers are well on their way to
being noncompetitive.
George, what you say is right in principle, but not applied to the MVP.
When you're looking for an MVP candidate, you're not comparing the player
or pitcher to the replacement level slug but to his competition for the
award. So you're looking for the marginal amount of difference made to
his team, as compared to players in similar positions. When Bob Gibson
had an ERA of 1.12, he was so much more significant to his team than any
other pitcher that he was a serious MVP candidate (won it, if I remember
right). Greg Maddux has a better claim for that kind of dominance than
Randy Johnson in their respective leagues.
Baseball is 50% offense, 50% pitching and defense. A pitcher is a very
large part of the latter, virtually none of the former. A hitter is some
percentage of the former, some percentage of the latter. To try to figure
out numerically who made what contribution is probably nonsense.
Steve
|
88.2636 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 19 1996 11:21 | 25 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2635 by MUNDIS::SSHERMAN "Clean living and a fast outfield" >>>
>Baseball is 50% offense, 50% pitching and defense. A pitcher is a very
>large part of the latter, virtually none of the former. A hitter is some
>percentage of the former, some percentage of the latter. To try to figure
>out numerically who made what contribution is probably nonsense.
Well not really. Bill James has some pretty good formula for figuring out the
expected number of runs produced by a batter and the expected number of games
won produced by a given number of runs. And it's pretty obvious that teams
win a lot more when their Ace is on the mound than when the slugs are on the
mound.
Yes, overall offense is 50% and pitching is 50% but on an individual basis
Bill James numbers seem to indicate that over a season one single great pitcher
is about 2 to 3 times more effective than one single great hitter at generating
wins.
And here's another way to look at things. Each team has on average 4 starters
that they depend on and one closer for a total of 5 pitchers that are starting
level players. The rest of the pitchers are subs. Conversely they have 9 to 11
starting offensive players depending on platoons and the DH. That's more
evidence that a single pitcher is more important than a single hitter.
George
|
88.2637 | And now for some inpirational words from our MOD | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Mon Feb 19 1996 11:25 | 8 |
| 'Saw,
Since we have to be in here on a holiday you should provide us with
an inspirational essay. Perhaps relating the past presidents in their
self-sacrifice and patriotic virtues with this new crew of self serving
varmits.
we want an essay, we want an essay, we want an essay
|
88.2638 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Mon Feb 19 1996 11:36 | 12 |
| George how do you account for a lefty Carlton of 1972 who won 27 and
accounted for nearly 1/2 of the Phillies wins. Despite him they
finished last but he was virtually the most single, most valuable
player in the history of baseball according to his value to the team.
Now if the Phillies had had a vintage Schmidt or Joe Morgan they
probably would have won more games.
I personally would never vote for a pitcher, even more so in the five
day rotation of today. I'd be much more inclined to vote for an
infielder even to the point of considering Alicea's value last year to
the Sox over Vaughns.
|
88.2639 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 19 1996 11:44 | 32 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2638 by AKOCOA::BREEN "You never can tell" >>>
> George how do you account for a lefty Carlton of 1972 who won 27 and
> accounted for nearly 1/2 of the Phillies wins. Despite him they
> finished last but he was virtually the most single, most valuable
> player in the history of baseball according to his value to the team.
Same way that you could account for Willie Mays playing his entire career for
the Giants and only getting to the World Series twice. Even the best player
can't do it alone regardless if he's a pitcher or hitter. Baseball is still a
team sport. What we're talking about is the added value of a pitcher versus
a hitter.
> Now if the Phillies had had a vintage Schmidt or Joe Morgan they
> probably would have won more games.
No doubt, but the question is, how many? According to Bill James maybe
5 or 6 more games.
> I personally would never vote for a pitcher, even more so in the five
> day rotation of today. I'd be much more inclined to vote for an
> infielder even to the point of considering Alicea's value last year to
> the Sox over Vaughns.
I've seen Bill James numbers and I've presented some of my own. I'd be
interested in seeing some numbers to back up the contention that a hitter
can have a greater impact in his team.
I know one thing for sure, great hitters are more fun to watch than great
pitchers. At least most of the time.
George
|
88.2640 | In general, pitchers get shortchanged, but not always | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Mon Feb 19 1996 11:53 | 15 |
|
> Ayway, the conclusion was that as individual players go, a single pitcher is
> about twice as valuable as a single hitter. The MVP should always be a pitcher.
If Bill James actually wrote this (as opposed to being misinterpret-a-ted)
he's more fouled up than previously suspected. Similar, straight
statistical analyses (no intangibles, no "clutch" performance
differentiation) show the best starting pitcher to be the MVP
sometimes, but not always, or even often. Guidry over Rice in 1978
was one of those cases (yes, that decision was a minor injustice).
Clemens over Mattingly in 1986 was also on the money. Greg Maddux
should have at least a couple MVPs by now, too.
glenn
|
88.2641 | I think we don't disagree, maybe | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Feb 19 1996 12:12 | 20 |
| I'm not arguing that the pitcher is not the single most important man
on the field. Demonstrably he is. Pitching may not be 75% of the game
as Connie Mack once said, but it is surely 40%.
I'm saying that that should not be taken into calculation when determining
an MVP. In fact, no, I think it should, but the other way, because by
that reasoning, a hitter would have to have an absolute monster season
while no pitcher rose above pretty good, in order for the hitter's
"absolute" contribution, in number of wins or whatever, to surpass the
pitcher's. And that means we wouldn't have an award for the hitters in
most years, while the Cy Young is always there for the pitchers.
In fact, I think I just convinced myself that I'm in favor of pitchers
being excluded from the MVP voting entirely, because otherwise the hitters
wouldn't have a chance.
In other words, George, we agree on the facts; what conclusion do you
draw from those facts?
Steve
|
88.2642 | Classic example of begging the question, G. | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Mon Feb 19 1996 12:17 | 25 |
| Well you haven't made any response worth talking about except to quote
James or other equally worthless sources. However, to excuse James and
his "Schmidt in his prime was worth 6 games a year to the
Phillies"(have I summed you up correctly?) nonsense, teams have to have
a plan, especially on defense and to a point on offense.
The key to the plan is usually one player like a Ted Williams, Joe
Dimaggio or Mickey Mantle.
The Cleveland Indians are one team today that seem to be run by a plan
where they have emphasized a combination of offense and defense up the
middle, especially at shortstop and centerfield. The adjunct to that
was hitters like Belle and Thome, the latter even providing defense if
I can credit Joe Huber.
The key to this plan was Lofton in centerfield and he should always be
regarded as the mvp for Cleveland. Now swapping Tinsley and Lofton
would see a drop of about 15 games for Cleveland but perhaps only a
gain of 5 or 6 for the Redsox. In contrast swapping Valentin and the
Cleveland shortstop would mean a drop of 15 for the Redsox but probably
a drop for Cleveland also.
Again this is a conclusion just like James but to me the challenge for
James is to prove me right by his sh*tistics not wrong.
|
88.2643 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 19 1996 12:54 | 43 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2642 by AKOCOA::BREEN "You never can tell" >>>
> -< Classic example of begging the question, G. >-
>
> Well you haven't made any response worth talking about except to quote
> James or other equally worthless sources.
Well I did go through my own analysis based on runs created a few notes back.
If you disagree fine, but at least tell me why.
> The key to the plan is usually one player like a Ted Williams, Joe
> Dimaggio or Mickey Mantle.
Funny you should mention Williams and Dimaggio, those two guys demonstrate
my point about as well as anyone. How many times have you heard people talk
about those two guys in one breath but then look at how well the Yankees did
when Dimaggio was on the team and how well the Red Sox did when Williams was
on the team. Williams was, for my money, the greatest hitter in the history
of the game and he got to the World Series once. And the reason? Unlike the
Yankees, The Red Sox never had the pitching most of the years he was playing.
The one thing you see with just about every team that makes it to the World
Series is a 1st rate pitching staff. They usually have a good offense, and
often a good defense but they always have great pitching.
> The Cleveland Indians are one team today that seem to be run by a plan
> where they have emphasized a combination of offense and defense up the
> middle,
Defense is important but again 95% of your defense is the guy on the mound
and the ability of the guy behind the plate to make the guy on the mound
effective. Just compare the number of earned and unearned runs for any team.
True it's a rough estimate but a typical game has 10-20 hits and only 1-2
errors.
> Again this is a conclusion just like James but to me the challenge for
> James is to prove me right by his sh*tistics not wrong.
His statistics work. Things like runs created and his formula for wins
generated based on runs keep working out year after year. I'm happy with
them, I've had pretty good luck evaluating players based on the system of
Sibermetrics developed by James.
George
|
88.2644 | John Valentin may have been #3 too-- I'm not kidding | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Mon Feb 19 1996 13:09 | 16 |
|
> In fact, I think I just convinced myself that I'm in favor of pitchers
> being excluded from the MVP voting entirely, because otherwise the hitters
> wouldn't have a chance.
I disagree. I think the field should be wide open (with or without
a separate Cy Young Award for pitchers), and even without the
anti-pitcher bias, the outcomes (if performances were properly
evaluated) wouldn't be that far out of line. Sure, Greg Maddux
should have been the NL MVP in 1995, but there was no pitcher in
the AL (including Randy Johnson) whose contributions exceeded
Tim Salmon's or Albert Belle's (Tim Wakefield was close in August
when he was still sporting that mid-1's ERA, but then he blew up).
glenn
|
88.2645 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Mon Feb 19 1996 13:26 | 25 |
|
> Well I did go through my own analysis based on runs created a few notes back.
> If you disagree fine, but at least tell me why.
Sure, there's a very obvious flaw in the analysis. You're giving a
20-win pitcher sole credit for that accomplishment (worth 10+ wins),
where other factors were present, not the least of which is "good
fortune" (let's avoid the use of that word luck). Conversely you're
not giving the hitter credit for all the "extra" games he may also
have "won" by hitting at the right time (in the clutch, etc.). It's a
poor comparison. It's sloppy analysis. As far as starting pitchers
go, in this age of every-5th-day starters (which _does_ make a
starting pitcher less valauble, relative to an everyday player),
probably the only neutral-support, neutral-"luck" 20-win pitcher in
baseball is Greg Maddux. There's no one else in his league, not
even Randy Johnson.
Another way of saying the same thing is that if you stick with
ERA-based performance measurement to be consistent in using a
"run basis" as with hitters, the best starting pitcher in the
league is not always the dominant performer...
glenn
|
88.2646 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 19 1996 13:44 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2641 by MUNDIS::SSHERMAN "Clean living and a fast outfield" >>>
>In fact, I think I just convinced myself that I'm in favor of pitchers
>being excluded from the MVP voting entirely, because otherwise the hitters
>wouldn't have a chance.
There's already a Cy Young award for Pitchers, maybe there should be a
separate award for hitters. Then we wouldn't have this apples to oranges
type of comparison.
George
|
88.2647 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 19 1996 13:51 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2645 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Pride of Steel" >>>
> Sure, there's a very obvious flaw in the analysis. You're giving a
> 20-win pitcher sole credit for that accomplishment (worth 10+ wins),
> where other factors were present, not the least of which is "good
> fortune" (let's avoid the use of that word luck). Conversely you're
> not giving the hitter credit for all the "extra" games he may also
> have "won" by hitting at the right time (in the clutch, etc.). It's a
> poor comparison. It's sloppy analysis.
No not at all. Luck is taken into account in sabremetrics as it is with
any statistical analysis by looking at sample size. I'm not talking about
one game where a ball can bounce off Jose's head and go into the stands,
we're talking an entire season. Most starting pitchers get around 30 starts
a year and with most statistical techniques like normal distribution that's
right about the sample size where rates of errors go under 5%.
As for clutch hitting, I don't see what that has to do with this discussion.
That's a way to compare hitters to each other but what does that have to do
with comparing the average great pitcher to the average great hitter?
George
|
88.2648 | | XTATIC::CHILDS | Harry Browne for President! | Mon Feb 19 1996 13:52 | 11 |
|
Given you fondness my buddy Rocket Roger this statement must have hurt ya to
type it:
> As far as starting pitchers go, in this age of every-5th-day starters
> (which _does_ make a starting pitcher less valauble, relative to an
> everyday player), probably the only neutral-support, neutral-"luck" 20-win
> pitcher in baseball is Greg Maddux. There's no one else in his league, not
> even Randy Johnson.
;^)
|
88.2649 | Cut the dastistickal doublespeak, George... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Mon Feb 19 1996 15:20 | 16 |
|
> Most starting pitchers get around 30 starts
> a year and with most statistical techniques like normal distribution that's
> right about the sample size where rates of errors go under 5%.
Single-season W-L records are not at all a good indicator of pitching
performance. 30 starts is a small sample size and does not
account for the quality of the team behind the pitcher, etc. This
business about normal distribution and rate of error under 5% is
just jive, nothing more.
No, sad to say, MikeC, Roger Clemens is no longer what you can call
a "20-win" pitcher. But he was in his day...
glenn
|
88.2650 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 19 1996 15:55 | 20 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2649 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Pride of Steel" >>>
> This business about normal distribution and rate of error under 5% is
> just jive, nothing more.
No, it's not jive. The normal distribution kicks in pretty reliably at around
a sample size of 30. Maybe the alpha was 10%, I don't remember, it's been a
while but the impact of luck at around 30 is minimal.
At any rate, of course other players have an impact on what happens, that's
true for both offense and defense. We all agree on that, what we're trying
to decide is the relative worth of a single great pitcher or a single great
hitter.
Do you have any numbers or theory to say that hitters are more valuable?
At best it's hard to measure but it seems you are dismissing what I'm saying
and what Bill James is saying a little too casually without coming up with
a theory of your own.
George
|
88.2651 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Feb 19 1996 16:09 | 24 |
|
George,
OK, here's a thought...
Assume park-adjusted numbers in all cases.
Suppose we compare to league average, relative to position offensively.
Say pitcher X pitches 270 innings, 2.50 ERA, relative to a 4.50 league
ERA. That 2 runs/game, times 30 games, equals 60 runs.
Say batter Y has 136 equivalent runs/runs created/whatever, vs. a
league average at their position of 76 ER, and neutral defense.
We've then got, using fairly reasonable examples, two equal players
relative to average.
Except - I suspect the difference between average ER and peak ER
is even larger than that, usually.
Does this seem a reasonable basis for comparison?
Joe
|
88.2652 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Feb 19 1996 17:08 | 21 |
| It does seem reasonable but there is one factor that has to be added in and
I'm not exactly sure how to do it. It's the flip side of what people have
been saying about how a pitcher only pitches one out of every 4.5 games.
A pitcher with his 2.5 ERA is holding the opposing team down to 2.5 runs
(2 runs below average) in all the innings he plays in one game. Assuming he's
a great pitcher this would be 7+ innings of that game.
By contrast, the hitter who creates 90 more hits than his replacement spreads
them out over many of his games for an average of 90/162 or 0.55 runs per game.
It would seem to me that the chances of holding a team to 2.5 runs in a game
would have more of an impact on the games you played than creating an extra
0.55 runs per game.
In other words, a great pitcher has an impact on fewer games but that is a
profound impact. It's not clear that averaging .55 runs per game would win
many games unless those runs came in bunches. One run might turn a 1 run
game into a tie but then someone else would have to win it.
George
|
88.2653 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Feb 19 1996 17:32 | 17 |
|
George,
Yes, in an _individual_ game, a pitcher can have a greater impact;
I don't believe anyone is doubting that.
And you know as well as anyone that if the numbers are _truly_ equal,
(say 60 runs scored/saved), then the _pitcher_ should have the edge,
based upon James pythagorean theorm.
But I suspect that, in the majority of cases, the hitter isn't equal,
but ahead; by the time you count in defense, the MVP should _usually_
be a hitter.
Of course, Maddux in '95 should have been an obvious exception...
Joe
|
88.2654 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Feb 20 1996 08:16 | 21 |
| Pitchers play defense as well. Look at how guys like Maddux, Glavine, and
Hershiser help out their team with their glove. In fact when you consider that
most MVPs are not middle infielders it may be that pitchers contribute more
defensively than most guys playing 1st base or the outfield (hot MVP spots).
But let's take a look at pitchers and hitters from the point of runs. As
we were saying yesterday, if a great pitcher holds a team to 2.5 runs a game
that gives his team a really good chance of picking up a win every 4.5 games.
If a great hitter creates .55 more runs per game then that comes to around
2.475 runs in that same 4.5 games but that is only likely to turn a potential
loss into a win if the runs come in a bunch. More likely they will be spread
out and in most cases that won't make the difference between a win and a loss.
So yes, over an individual game the pitcher has a big advantage in terms of
contribution but over the 4.5 games the hitter only gives his team a chance
to pick up a win if he creates runs in bunches or gets a timely (which means
statistically unlikely) hit.
Pitchers for MVP,
George
|
88.2655 | | XTATIC::CHILDS | Harry Browne for President! | Tue Feb 20 1996 08:20 | 4 |
|
This discussion much like baseball bores me to tears. Perhaps that's why
the game is dying.............just a commentary not a knock at debator
so need to remind me about nexted unseenited.......
|
88.2656 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Feb 20 1996 08:27 | 18 |
| Well now that you mention it, this is the year we see if baseball is really
dieing.
Last year tons of people in this file went on and on about how baseball was
in decline and pointed to the terrible box office as proof. Others said the
poor box office was only a reaction to the strike.
Now we find out. If baseball is really in decline, box office should be
lower this year than last. If it was only a reaction to the strike, box office
should be up.
In any case, there sure don't seem to be any signs of a decline in baseball
here in Boston. It seems as popular as ever. Rocket Roger playing catch in a
tee shirt and Mo's contract seem to be getting as much news time as the Celtics
and Bruins.
PLAY BALL!!!
George
|
88.2657 | | XTATIC::CHILDS | Harry Browne for President! | Tue Feb 20 1996 08:35 | 5 |
|
True enough George and if Boston realized that there's more to the state than
Boston, UMASS would be the biggest sports story.
mike
|
88.2658 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Feb 20 1996 08:47 | 10 |
|
Hey, I think it's great that the college kids play games and get all excited
about their teams. It gives me a warm fuzzy seeing all those children running
around having a good time and getting some exercise.
But you got me there, I didn't realize UMASS had a baseball team worth
talk'en about. Is Camby another Randy Johnson who stands 6 what ever with
a wicked fastball?
George
|
88.2659 | Usually, correct... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Tue Feb 20 1996 09:40 | 15 |
|
> But I suspect that, in the majority of cases, the hitter isn't equal,
> but ahead; by the time you count in defense, the MVP should _usually_
> be a hitter.
>
> Of course, Maddux in '95 should have been an obvious exception...
Right on all counts. I also have serious doubts that Bill James
ever wrote that the best pitcher is twice as valuable as the best
everyday player, unless he's (James, not the player) recently
taken a severe blow to the head. George's recounting is the first
I'd ever heard of this theory...
glenn
|
88.2660 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | Yale 62, Penn 60 | Tue Feb 20 1996 10:43 | 7 |
| > Now we find out. If baseball is really in decline, box office should be
>lower this year than last. If it was only a reaction to the strike, box office
>should be up.
Why is this necessarily so ? A large number of the prime tickets are being
bought up by corporate entities; baseball could still be in decline and yet
have a sufficient remaining demand to use up the remaining tickets.
|
88.2661 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | Yale 62, Penn 60 | Tue Feb 20 1996 10:44 | 6 |
| > But you got me there, I didn't realize UMASS had a baseball team worth
>talk'en about. Is Camby another Randy Johnson who stands 6 what ever with
>a wicked fastball?
Last year UMass made their first NCAA baseball tournament since 1978, and is
a pre-season favorite to go again this year.
|
88.2662 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Feb 20 1996 11:16 | 10 |
| > Why is this necessarily so ? A large number of the prime tickets are being
> bought up by corporate entities; baseball could still be in decline and yet
> have a sufficient remaining demand to use up the remaining tickets.
Excellent point. George has cleverly ignored the studies that have been
cited in here that show baseball is so far down on kids' list of fun things
to do/watch, that it's right behind cleaning their rooms.
IMO, gate doesn't support what the studies are indicating: kids are playing
and watching the sport at a declining rate.
|
88.2663 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Feb 20 1996 11:22 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2660 by MIMS::ROLLINS_R "Yale 62, Penn 60" >>>
> Why is this necessarily so ? A large number of the prime tickets are being
> bought up by corporate entities; baseball could still be in decline and yet
> have a sufficient remaining demand to use up the remaining tickets.
Whoooooo, here it comes. Quick, put that buggy in reverse and back away from
the claim that baseball is in decline any how that works. Baseball is a
business, if the tickets are being sold and revenue is being generated then the
business is not in decline.
Also, these "corporate entities" live just as much in the 90's as the rest
of us. If they are buying up tickets it's because their management believes it
will help their bottom line in some fashion. And the only way I can think that
purchasing tickets helps is if they can gain some benefit from giving them
to people who want to go see ball games.
The claim was made that "baseball is in decline". If ticket sales are up
this year over last then clearly someone will be lining up at the crow counter.
PLAY BALL!!!
George
|
88.2664 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | Yale 62, Penn 60 | Tue Feb 20 1996 11:32 | 27 |
| > Whoooooo, here it comes. Quick, put that buggy in reverse and back away from
>the claim that baseball is in decline any how that works. Baseball is a
>business, if the tickets are being sold and revenue is being generated then the
>business is not in decline.
I'm not backing away from it. However, I don't think that is an accurate
way of measuring the decline. Just because you define it in these terms
doesn't mean I have to accept your definition.
> Also, these "corporate entities" live just as much in the 90's as the rest
>of us. If they are buying up tickets it's because their management believes it
>will help their bottom line in some fashion. And the only way I can think that
>purchasing tickets helps is if they can gain some benefit from giving them
>to people who want to go see ball games.
Yup. And they will EVENTUALLY buy up fewer baseball tickets. However, I
don't expect them to make such decisions instantly, nor break any existing
contracts in order to do so.
> The claim was made that "baseball is in decline". If ticket sales are up
>this year over last then clearly someone will be lining up at the crow counter.
Why so ? No one in here who believes that there is a decline in the interest
in baseball ever has suggested there will be an immediate drop in attendance
to be followed by ever decreasing attendance until MLB games are played in
completely empty stadiums. Go ahead and build your straw man and knock him
down, but don't expect any applause or hearty congratulations when you do so.
|
88.2665 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Feb 20 1996 12:56 | 20 |
| Oh, Ok, I didn't understand.
So the tickets are selling well but baseball is in decline because ... what?
- Those fans are just doing it out of habit?
- Just going to make their aging parents happy?
- Hoped to catch a foul ball to use the thread in their sewing machines?
- They thought the "Phillies" game was horse race?
- Bought all those corporate tickets because CEO was too squeamish to use
real chicken droppings in his compost heap?
- Thought "Padres" tickets were for a new Broadway show about funny monks?
Let's see, need 4 more to make a Letterman Top 10.
George
|
88.2666 | Hopefully, baseball in its proper place; fine with me... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:01 | 17 |
|
> Why is this necessarily so ? A large number of the prime tickets are being
> bought up by corporate entities; baseball could still be in decline and yet
> have a sufficient remaining demand to use up the remaining tickets.
True enough, but in MLB's case, a little decline isn't such a bad
thing. In fact, it's probably good, and in other industries is
known as a "correction". While the MLBPA technically won a
deserved victory in court, they also were to a large extent put in
their place (I know George will dispute this) and both sides are
"smarter" (the kind of "smarter" that it takes a 2 x 4 to the
side of the head to effect) for the experience. You don't want
anything becoming _too_ popular for its own good, a la the WWF,
or NASCAR...
glenn
|
88.2667 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:01 | 3 |
| >a la the WWF, or NASCAR...
Why the redundant reference, Glenn?
|
88.2668 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:31 | 4 |
| Reading this note string, all I can say is:
Slow day, fresh horse.
|
88.2669 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:55 | 6 |
| Hey 'Saw, we never got the Presidents day essay but now I realize that
the real day isn't until Thursday, Febuary 22.
Considering the mutual respect old George had from so many different
types of folks who all hated each other with a passion he has to be
considered one of the great, great men of all time.
|
88.2670 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:59 | 19 |
| > Hey 'Saw, we never got the Presidents day essay but now I realize that
> the real day isn't until Thursday, Febuary 22.
Yeah, I didn't get around to it...
> Considering the mutual respect old George had from so many different
> types of folks who all hated each other with a passion he has to be
> considered one of the great, great men of all time.
I have several ties to George Washington now, and it would behoove me to
write up an awe-inspiring essay to stir the senses and charge the emotions.
Whether or not I'll have the time is another matter....
'Saw
|
88.2671 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Feb 20 1996 15:42 | 10 |
|
Reading this notes line all I can say is.
Shut Up!!!
|
88.2672 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Feb 20 1996 15:53 | 9 |
| Are we suppose to be shutting up about:
a) Pitchers v. Hitters in MVP voting
b) Baseball is in decline
c) Presidents day
d) All of the above
e) None of the above
George
|
88.2673 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | iceMAN - 1995 SPORTS NOTY Winner | Tue Feb 20 1996 15:55 | 5 |
88.2674 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | NOT the 1995 SPORTS NOTY Whiner | Wed Feb 21 1996 07:56 | 12 |
| >> re: .2622
>> Mike, Ted was talking about someone else named "Bell". I was talking
>> about Albert Belle.
No, I was talking about Albert. You should be careful about
criticizing someone for a simple typo...afterall, you fat-fingered the
referenced note yourself. My reply was in .2621, not .2622.
But not to worry...everyone has to row with the oars they have.
Ted
|
88.2675 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Thu Feb 22 1996 17:04 | 14 |
|
George,
As someone who was not involved in last years debate about baseball
attendance, etc...I don't think comparing this year to last year will
be fair to both sides of the argument.
I personally believe that comparing this year to years BEFORE the
strike will be more indicative of what is occuring. That being said, I
tend to agree with (forgot who it was) that said reduced attendance may
not be a problem, but rather a correction.
marc
|
88.2676 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Feb 23 1996 08:18 | 9 |
| I agree that last year's low turnout was caused by the strike. However there
were plenty of people in this file pointing to reduced attendance last summer
and claiming it was evidence that baseball was generally in decline.
I'm wondering if one of those folks is going to to stand by what they said
and predict even lower attendance this year or if they have realized the
error you just mentioned.
George
|
88.2677 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Fri Feb 23 1996 10:02 | 21 |
| > I'm wondering if one of those folks is going to to stand by what they said
>and predict even lower attendance this year or if they have realized the
>error you just mentioned.
George Maewski you're (I'm being polite) a SILLY BOY !
Well, I'm sure you have me in mind with the above, but attendance was
not the key to my comments re: studies showing baseball as losing in the
battle to attract young fans. And this *IS* a problem, whether you want
to acknowledge it or not. You can stuff all your corporate ticket
purchases the next time you hit the men's room, 'cause that's not the
issue (I'm addressing).
MLB is still hurting from the players' walk-out in '94. This is a big
year for them in terms of public relations. Players have to become more
accessible to the fans. And owners have to offer *some* more affordable
tickets and *family days*.
I hope they turn the trend around. I've played and been around the sport
my whole life, and it kills me that my oldest son has no interest in
playing. He wants to BE LIKE MIKE !
|
88.2678 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Fri Feb 23 1996 10:14 | 3 |
| >He wants to BE LIKE MIKE !
Tyson?
|
88.2679 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Can the Coach... | Fri Feb 23 1996 10:16 | 7 |
|
This year you will have MLB touting that attendance is up and
that the strike didn't hurt, MLB is still America's game. Why? because
there is no strike this year, so they are going to play a full 162
games. MLB marketing will use the numbers to there advantage.
Ron
|
88.2680 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Fri Feb 23 1996 13:01 | 9 |
| > I agree that last year's low turnout was caused by the strike. However there
>were plenty of people in this file pointing to reduced attendance last summer
>and claiming it was evidence that baseball was generally in decline.
Show me one note of someone who said that. I think everyone agreed that last
year's attendance drop-off was due directly to the strike. OTOH, people who
believe MLB's own polling organizations (MLB DOES believe them, BTW) recognize
that the strike gave additional impulse to the general decline in interest
in MLB (as a percentage of the general population).
|
88.2681 | .2674 still smarting from baseball/softball losses to CLE | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | iceMAN - 1995 SPORTS NOTY Winner | Sat Feb 24 1996 10:04 | 10 |
88.2682 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Sun Feb 25 1996 15:48 | 2 |
| Never accuse others to excuse yourself. Just because you're slippery,
doesn't mean you're polished.
|
88.2683 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | iceMAN - 1995 SPORTS NOTY Winner | Sun Feb 25 1996 20:39 | 3 |
88.2684 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Thu Feb 29 1996 22:28 | 44 |
| >> Polished? This coming from the guy who said "If I play for Buggs
>> Moran, winning would be a forgone conclusion."
Well, that's twice now you've credited me with saying that in a
couple of different files, although you'd have a hard time finding
someone who heard me say that. Truth be known, I never publicly
stated that. In fact, I can't even take credit as the author of the
statement...a couple of MRO league members expressed that sentiment
to me while I was being recruited to the MRO League. History has
proven the opinion to be correct. My decision was made in order to
accept the known challenge of going up against the current league
champs, many of whom I played with in the Maynard League. I didn't
want to join a team that just won the championship...I chose to accept
a more challenging course of competition rather than the easier
opportunity for a championship. But lo and behold, that first year
in the league I was fortunate enough to experience both. Sometimes
it works out that way.
However, since you've chosen to disclose the statement publicly on
my behalf, we should clarify how you came to 'hear' it. It was when
I sent you an E-Mail message and shared the opinion in the text of
said message. You chose to divulge certain contents of that private
message, apparently in an attempt to make a point that I'm not clear
about. Whatever your motive, your attempt to blow out another's candle
does not make your's shine any brighter. If you're trying to imply
that my making that statement to you was wrong, you're right. The
statement in and of itself proved truthful; what I was wrong about was
entrusting it to you. Again and again, you continue to meet my
expectations.
You also mentioned that I'm:
"-< .2674 still smarting from baseball/softball losses to CLE >-"
I guess you can believe that if it makes you feel somehow superior to
others. The fact is, that while I will admit to being competitive, I
understand the reality of sports. Only one team can be the ultimate
victor, but I know, too, that achieving a goal is never final, and
failure to do so is never fatal.
I interpret your philosophy [from E-Mail messages which I will NOT
disclose publicly] to be more along the lines of: "It's not whether
you win or lose, but how you place the blame."
|
88.2685 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | iceMAN - 1995 SPORTS NOTY Winner | Fri Mar 01 1996 08:39 | 16 |
88.2686 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Fri Mar 01 1996 08:53 | 1 |
| Would you like a theme song for this soap opera?
|
88.2687 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Fri Mar 01 1996 09:02 | 11 |
| Why don't you guys get a room.....
Or take it to mail....
Or just forget about it altogether.
Or better yet, write it out, sell the movie rights, and then let us know
when it's going to be on TV
[many 8^)]
|
88.2688 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | iceMAN - 1995 SPORTS NOTY Winner | Fri Mar 01 1996 09:57 | 4 |
88.2689 | get it right | FABSIX::J_PAGE | | Fri Mar 01 1996 10:44 | 13 |
| RE:-1
Again....Groaner is twisting people's word's. I believe the wording
was..
"Paul, take that BS to the Sports conference where that kind of
thing is tolerated please."
The only person who said ::Sports was crap was Groaner....
john
|
88.2690 | I'm the only person who said that... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Fri Mar 01 1996 11:06 | 6 |
|
Groaner is crap... ;-)
glenn
|
88.2691 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Fri Mar 01 1996 11:43 | 18 |
| I've known the reputation that sports has in other conferences for years and it
has never bothered me.
Sports fills a need, and if there was no need there wouldn't be sports. I'm
far from being an anal retentive moderator, and there ARE some mods out there
that have the silliest rules for their leisure conferences. If that makes them
feel superior, hey good for them.
A long time ago, I lost my need to feel superior to other people, either
through my sports activities or anything else. I am what I am, and I'm
comfortable with that.
If folks need to feel superior, more power to them. It's just said that their
quest to feel superior comes at the expense of other people and other people's
feelings.
'Saw
|
88.2692 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Fri Mar 01 1996 11:59 | 11 |
| If'n yunz are trying to get Groaner to take a trivial,
and what should be personal issue, off line - rots-a-ruck!
Last time I tried that his email reply was that he didn't
have time to deal with non-work related issues via email.
Takes all kinds....
billl
|
88.2693 | | CSLALL::BRULE | SNOW SUCKS | Fri Mar 01 1996 12:07 | 5 |
| Well the Red Sox first spring game is today against B.C. Think they'll
win.
:^)
Mike
|
88.2695 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | iceMAN - 1995 SPORTS NOTY Winner | Fri Mar 01 1996 13:45 | 3 |
88.2696 | We'd give the devil ulcers... | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Sun Mar 03 1996 12:12 | 44 |
| Frank,
You're right...I guess I took Mr. Tease slogan upon login far too
literally. I'll be quiet after this, and would also ask Paul to be
quiet, too.
Paul,
Please don't quote me...what you hear is not what I write. And
please don't take my comments out of context. I know you mean well,
but people could get the wrong idea. If my wording is unclear, state
that, but don't try to interpret on my behalf.
Frank,
To answer your questions, also w/ [many 8^)]
>>Why don't you guys get a room.....
Sobering thought...management however frowns on remnants of
cheez-whiz-filled twinkies being left behind.
>>Or take it to mail....
Been there, done that. But apparently, LDUCin' needs an audience.
If you hit the bullseye, and no one is around to see it, is it still a
bullseye?
>>Or just forget about it altogether.
The best idea, in all seriousness.
>>Or better yet, write it out, sell the movie rights, and then let us know
when it's going to be on TV
Well, my part could be portrayed by Tom Selleck [age appropriate, good
looking, and likely has more power at the plate than I]; your role
would obviously be OSCAR-ed by Brad Pitt [and he COULD change his eye
color if need be]. I'll leave it to Paul to pick who he'd want
playing himself. The theme song as requested could be: "I would lie
for you, and that's the truth."
|
88.2697 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | iceMAN - 1995 SPORTS NOTY Winner | Sun Mar 03 1996 13:30 | 32 |
88.2698 | Now THAT'S grounds for an LDUC! | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Mar 04 1996 06:40 | 11 |
| > Been there, done that. But apparently, LDUCin' needs an audience.
More to the point, it needs a WILLING audience. I see no evidence that
it had one.
> looking, and likely has more power at the plate than I]; your role
> would obviously be OSCAR-ed by Brad Pitt [and he COULD change his eye
'Saw, are you going to take this lying down???
Steve
|
88.2699 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Mar 04 1996 08:52 | 9 |
| Well the Sox took one from B.C. but lost in 10 to the Twins.
This new guy Garciaparra looks pretty good at Short. According to Baseball
Digest he was an all-star AA shortstop last year and is expected to play AAA
this season. Maybe he'll come along faster and they can move Valentine to
third. That would give them several guys to use as trade bait for getting
a real right fielder.
George
|
88.2700 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Mon Mar 04 1996 09:09 | 32 |
| |> Been there, done that. But apparently, LDUCin' needs an audience.
|
|More to the point, it needs a WILLING audience. I see no evidence that
|it had one.
That's a good point. It's like the old tree in the forest thing. How did that
go?
If a tree in the forest fell down on a spotted owl and
no one was there to hear it, would the environmentalists
get all upset?
|> looking, and likely has more power at the plate than I]; your role
|> would obviously be OSCAR-ed by Brad Pitt [and he COULD change his eye
|
|'Saw, are you going to take this lying down???
Actually, I'm quite the fan of Brad Pitt. After viewing his performance in
"Legends of the Fall" (wherein Julia Ormond stole my heart) and "12 Monkies"
I'm convinced that he can act despite being cursed with good looks.
Actually, I was kind of envisioning Dennis Franz for my part, although he and I
look nothing alike.
Charles Bronson in his younger days.....
If neither of those two are available I supposed I could let Buddy Hackett
have the part. 8^)
'Saw
|
88.2701 | I'll take your word for it | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Mar 04 1996 09:31 | 29 |
| >Actually, I'm quite the fan of Brad Pitt. After viewing his performance in
>"Legends of the Fall" (wherein Julia Ormond stole my heart) and "12 Monkies"
>I'm convinced that he can act despite being cursed with good looks.
Hmm, surprising. I have seen neither of the above, and know Pitt only from
"Interview with the Vampire", in which (as the famous pan had it) he ran the
gamut of emotion from A to B.
>Actually, I was kind of envisioning Dennis Franz for my part, although he and I
>look nothing alike.
I don't know what to make of this, except that you evidently expect the movie
to bomb.
>Charles Bronson in his younger days.....
For some reason, I find this plausible. Of course, in his younger days,
nobody had heard of Charles Bronson.
>If neither of those two are available I supposed I could let Buddy Hackett
>have the part. 8^)
A highly IMplausible New Englander. No, somehow I come up with the likes of
DeNiro or Pacino or even Cassavetes. You definitely require a character
actor.
But even if Brad Pitt can act, I doubt he's up to this challenge.
Steve
|
88.2702 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Mon Mar 04 1996 09:37 | 33 |
| >Hmm, surprising. I have seen neither of the above, and know Pitt only from
>"Interview with the Vampire", in which (as the famous pan had it) he ran the
>gamut of emotion from A to B.
I liked him in Legends. I really enjoyed that movie, and he was very, very
good in 12 Monkies, playing the son of a rich guy who was totally nuts.
|>Actually, I was kind of envisioning Dennis Franz for my part, although he and I
|>look nothing alike.
|
|I don't know what to make of this, except that you evidently expect the movie
|to bomb.
I like his abrasive edge.
|>Charles Bronson in his younger days.....
|
|For some reason, I find this plausible. Of course, in his younger days,
|nobody had heard of Charles Bronson.
I was thinking of the "Magnificent Seven" era.
>No, somehow I come up with the likes of
>DeNiro or Pacino or even Cassavetes. You definitely require a character
>actor.
Hey! You lookin' at me? 8^)
'Saw
|
88.2703 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Mar 04 1996 10:09 | 18 |
|
> This new guy Garciaparra looks pretty good at Short. According to Baseball
>Digest he was an all-star AA shortstop last year and is expected to play AAA
>this season. Maybe he'll come along faster and they can move Valentine to
>third. That would give them several guys to use as trade bait for getting
>a real right fielder.
Nice idea, but I don't think the timing's right yet, unless
Garciaparra's developed a _lot_ in the offseason. A Naehring/Valentin
combination appears to be so much more valuable now (based upon what
Garciaparra did last year) that a switch without at least 1/2 year of
AAA experience for Nomar makes no real sense.
And I'm not sure _why_ people are so down on O'Leary. Sure, you could
find better, but O'Leary's not a _bad_ player, and could still develop
a bit...
Joe
|
88.2704 | Capturing the inner Chainsaw | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Mar 04 1996 10:17 | 6 |
| Not talking about a physical resemblance, 'Saw, but the ability to
deal with the complexities of the character, the tough moderator with
a literary bent, the rugger with the heart of gold. Clearly requires
major league acting ability.
Steve
|
88.2705 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Mon Mar 04 1996 10:25 | 2 |
| Don't forget the slightly looney side, and the ability to knock off some
hellacious farts after a night of drinking scotch. 8^)
|
88.2706 | I told you, major league acting ability | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Mar 04 1996 10:40 | 6 |
| >Don't forget the slightly looney side, and the ability to knock off some
>hellacious farts after a night of drinking scotch. 8^)
Well, they say a serious actor should be able to shed tears on demand...
Steve
|
88.2707 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Mar 04 1996 11:06 | 17 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2703 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
> And I'm not sure _why_ people are so down on O'Leary. Sure, you could
> find better, but O'Leary's not a _bad_ player, and could still develop
> a bit...
Actually he's not a bad guy to have at Fenway. He's a platoon hitter hitting
over .300 against righties and struggling around .230 against lefties but then
you don't see as many lefties in Fenway so it works out OK at home most of the
time.
Eventually though the Sox have to play against lefites and suddenly there's
a hole in the lineup.
Maybe they'll work out another platoon in right.
George
|
88.2708 | Don't we have a rule requiring 1 '86 met on our roster each year? | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Mon Mar 04 1996 11:43 | 8 |
| Apparently they're all set to sign Mitchell who had a pretty good 1994
season and then signed with Japan. I'm sure they'd like to get
Mitchell's bat in there especially against lefties. Having Greenwell,
who I've always liked, as a fixture in Fenway's leftfield, where the
likes of Canseco and Mitchell and Jefferson would be much more
comfortable than right field, is a problem.
I'd surmise that Mike won't be playing more than 130 games this year.
|
88.2709 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Mon Mar 04 1996 11:48 | 7 |
| > Having Greenwell,
> who I've always liked, as a fixture in Fenway's leftfield,
This confirms your lack of judgement.
The Gator is a fun guy to have around, but when you've got a weak
arm from left field in Fenway, you know there's a problem...
|
88.2710 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Mon Mar 04 1996 11:54 | 29 |
| |> Having Greenwell,
|> who I've always liked, as a fixture in Fenway's leftfield,
|
|This confirms your lack of judgement.
|
|The Gator is a fun guy to have around, but when you've got a weak
|arm from left field in Fenway, you know there's a problem...
I began to have my suspicions about Billte's intellectual abilities fading when
he began touting Steve Grogan as being a part of the pantheon of great QBs.
I began to doubt even more when he started talking about O'D as MVP of the SB.
But this one has to take it....
I like having Mike Greenwell around too -- he lends a NASCAR element to MLB
becasue you know that he's going into the wall sooner or later, with another
record breaking concussion. He says funny things, probably because he's hit
the wall so many times and concussed himself so many times.
But he couldn't carry Rice, Yaz's, or Williams jock on his best day.....
'Saw
|
88.2711 | hope its that overated/overhyped Naerhing | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Mon Mar 04 1996 12:09 | 25 |
|
A couple of things from the first weekend of spring ball.....
1) Nomar has gained about 10 or so pounds and it ain't from drinking
beer. If he hits look out.....I still think he is a year away though.
2) Belinda was whinnin about wantin to close for somebody in the
paper on Sunday. He gets a chance in a spring game and lites a fire.
See ya, seen enough of that crap with Ryan.
3) Sele seems to be back which is only great news.
4) Alex Cole will be the starting CF'er.
5) O'Leary is a great 4th outfielder. Although Greenwell is a good
5th outfielder.
6) Jose will play 100+ games as a RF'er and will not hurt the Sox
defensively.
7) Look for either Alicea or Naerhing to be traded.
Jerry
|
88.2712 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Mon Mar 04 1996 12:32 | 7 |
| > 2) Belinda was whinnin about wantin to close for somebody in the
> paper on Sunday. He gets a chance in a spring game and lites a fire.
> See ya, seen enough of that crap with Ryan.
Belinda SUCKS.
|
88.2713 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Mar 04 1996 12:34 | 9 |
| I can't believe that Greenwell, Cole, Canseco is ever going to be the
Red Sox outfield. At least I hope that Greenwell, Cole, Canseco will never all
be in the outfield at one time. They may each play out there at some time or
other but not all at once.
It's still early and there's still time for Duquette to make some moves.
This entire lineup looks somewhat "in progress" from a GM point of view.
George
|
88.2714 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Mon Mar 04 1996 12:37 | 5 |
|
Stan Belinda has been whinning the last 8 years about being a closer.
The guy is useless in pressure situations where a big time closer
thrives.
|
88.2715 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Mar 04 1996 12:46 | 11 |
| The only part of Francisco Cabrerra's MBL career worth talking about is the
swing he took at a pitch fed up by Pirates reliever Stan Belinda in Game 7 of
the N.C.L.S.
That swing drove the ball into the outfield and scored David Justice which
put the Braves in the World Series.
True one pitch doesn't mean much but Belinda's no closer. He's not a bad
setup man though and should continue to give the Sox some good innings.
George
|
88.2716 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Mon Mar 04 1996 13:03 | 3 |
| re. -1 Sid Bream, not David Justice, scored the run.
UMDan
|
88.2717 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Opening day in 32 days | Mon Mar 04 1996 13:45 | 10 |
|
As long as John Valentin is playing well defensively and continues
to hit. Nomar will have to be in the Ozzie Smith category if he wants
to play SS. The Sox have no intentions of messing around with John
Valentin. At least the Sox have quality at SS, first time in a long
time. They can play Valentin, Cordero, or Garciappara at SS. Whichever
one of the three is quicker going to his right. I would try him at 2b
to cover up the middle. They play the other 2 at SS and 3B.
Ron
|
88.2718 | Nomar G 1997 AL ROY | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Mon Mar 04 1996 14:55 | 13 |
|
I agree. Don't really know how any team can ask a SS as good as
Valentin (not Valentine) to change positions. Point is Nomar throws
some serious leather and is a ML SS now. Can he hit, well probably
not now but he will. This will put the Sox in a great position. As
Ron pointed out depth at the SS position. My guess is Nomar is a 2B
waitin to be converted or Val will be movin to 3B. I prefer the 2nd
of the two. An infield of Vaughn, Cordero, Nomar and Valentin would
be one of the better ones in the leauge today.
Jerry
|
88.2719 | Duprez,Way: The Homer and Virgil of our day | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Mon Mar 04 1996 15:03 | 13 |
|
When did the myth of Greenwell having a bad arm originate. His assist
totals have always been high and I have personally seen him throw out
runners. His major problem was Ellis Burks for which he was blamed but
since he's worked with about a dozen centerfielders since with no
similar problem I would put the blame back on Ellis.
But I had a different point and that is that Fenway Leftfield is a
better place to stick a non defensive performer than right (or for that
matter first base - another question entirely).
If you want a Redsox defensive liability look at first base and boo
that guy.
|
88.2720 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Mar 04 1996 15:10 | 9 |
|
> If you want a Redsox defensive liability look at first base and boo
> that guy.
Actually, evidence suggests that Vaughn has taken a step forward
defensively, and is now a roughly average defensive first baseman.
Even when he wasn't, he was still far better than Frank Thomas.
Joe
|
88.2721 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Mon Mar 04 1996 15:32 | 18 |
| > His assist totals have always been high
Damning with faint praise. There's *no* positive correlation between assist
totals and arm strength. If anything, there's a negative correlation -
runners tend to be more aggressive on a weak-armed outfielder.
>and I have personally seen him throw out runners.
Congratulations.
>His major problem was Ellis Burks
Yes, Ellis made him look even worse than he was/is.
Mike Greenwell is an OK ballplayer. He hits for a good average and has
mediocre power. I don't think he's a liability in terms of getting to and
catching balls (certainly not as much as some make him out to be), but he
can't throw to save his life.
|
88.2722 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Mar 04 1996 15:37 | 15 |
| >> His assist totals have always been high
>Damning with faint praise. There's *no* positive correlation between assist
>totals and arm strength. If anything, there's a negative correlation -
>runners tend to be more aggressive on a weak-armed outfielder.
However, baserunner kills are _very_ valuable. Not valuable enough to
offset lots of additional bases given away, but certainly valuable
enough to offeset some additional bases.
And players with "great" arms _have_ had terrific baserunner kill
total. Clemente did. Barfield did. I very much doubt there's a
negative correlation, though there might not be a positive one...
Joe
|
88.2723 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Mon Mar 04 1996 16:07 | 10 |
| > However, baserunner kills are _very_ valuable. Not valuable enough to
> offset lots of additional bases given away, but certainly valuable
> enough to offeset some additional bases.
Joe, I simply ask one thing of you. Watch Greenwell, and then tell me where
you think he sits in terms of bases given/bases taken away.
A guy with a great arm typically develops a great baserunner kill rate, and
then it comes down as they develop a reputation. I don't know about Clemente,
but I'm pretty sure that's what happened with Barfield.
|
88.2724 | Teddy < 1952 was probably the best of the four | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Mon Mar 04 1996 16:20 | 9 |
| Perhaps you watch more redsox games than I do Roland but for the ones I
have seen the times Greenwell has thrown out runners is proportionally
much higher than Rice and pretty much on a par with the overrated Yaz.
Unquestionably Greenwell's play of the wall is right up there with the
previous four. Like Yaz and unlike Rice, Greenwell is always hustling.
I still contend that Greenwell should have been tried in right where he
could still have made the occasional glaring mistake but even the good
ones make a lot in right field at Fenway.
|
88.2725 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Mar 04 1996 16:23 | 9 |
|
>Joe, I simply ask one thing of you. Watch Greenwell, and then tell me where
>you think he sits in terms of bases given/bases taken away.
I'll watch again this season, but from I've seen of him to date I'd
guess he's clearly given up more than enough bases to take away the
positive value of his baserunner kills.
Joe
|
88.2726 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Mar 04 1996 16:42 | 20 |
| From what I've seen of Greenwell, he's erratic. One game I was at last summer
was typical. He made a sliding catch in the left field corner in which he
slammed into the wall in foul territory but held the ball, then an inning or
two later he came in to far on a routine pop fly to left that landed behind him
almost exactly on the spot where he had been standing.
I forget if it was that game or another but once he hit a clutch double
driving in some runs then made a little league mistake by over running the bag
and getting tagged out just beyond 2nd.
If his kill rate is high it may be due to the erratic nature of his play. If
you're a runner you never know, he might throw you out and then again he might
lose the ball down the back of his shirt and jump around like a clown while you
circle the bases.
From play to play you never know which guy is going to show up. Heck within a
play he'll do something great and something terrible. What can you say, he's
Greenwell. All and all I like to watch him play, it's fun.
George
|
88.2727 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Mon Mar 04 1996 16:43 | 12 |
| > Unquestionably Greenwell's play of the wall is right up there with the
> previous four. Like Yaz and unlike Rice, Greenwell is always hustling.
> I still contend that Greenwell should have been tried in right where he
> could still have made the occasional glaring mistake but even the good
> ones make a lot in right field at Fenway.
You've left out one part of his game that IS a problem: he drops the
baseball A LOT !!...and misplays flyballs A LOT !!!!
At least his errors in LF (at Fenway Park) are not as damaging as they
would be in RF. He misplay a ball in LF and it *might* result in a man
on 2B. He does the same thing in RF and the guy could be on 3B.
|
88.2728 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Mon Mar 04 1996 17:34 | 14 |
| yabbut, joe my point and indirectly pointed out by others is that he
does make mistakes but in right he'd be making closer to the same
number that the average fenway right fielder makes.
But it's too late now for Greenwell to be tried in right. I don't
think there's a lot of objectivity on Greenwell anymore. I also
suspect that last year he had arm problems he didn't have in prior
years.
Although I didn't see it last year so much, in 1994 I personally saw
more outright mistakes and poor play on Vaughn's part than I ever saw
on Greenwell. Then again how many would agree on how poor Jerry Remy
was in the early 80s before Barrett came along and moved him up to the
NESN booth.
|
88.2729 | what do I know | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Tue Mar 05 1996 06:24 | 17 |
|
Greenwell is a bad defensive outfielder. He has a weak arm but it is
accurate in Fenway thus he has a decent number of assists. Another
reason he gets assists is that opposing runners will almost always try
and take the next base on Greenwell giving him more chances. Don't
know exactly how this "baserunner kill" stat is formulated but if it is
purely a raw number it don't mean squat. I was willing to and supported
Greenwell as a starting LF'er early on in his career when he was driving
in runs and being productive at the plate. A "defensive gem" playing in
left field is overrated especially in Fenway, but now that he has become
a bad defensive outfielder/banjo hitter its time to go. Greenwell gives
you 100% everynight out and especially in today's pro athlete that is a
rareity. Unless Greenwell can hit with some power I'd sit him.
Jerry
|
88.2730 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Tue Mar 05 1996 08:23 | 7 |
| Yaz was overrated, but Grogan was a great QB.
I must've slipped into an alternate reality when I got out of bed this
morning......
'Saw
|
88.2731 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Mar 05 1996 09:01 | 13 |
|
Baserunner Kills are nothing but outfielder "Assists".
"Assist" is, simply, a wimpy name for one of the more important
defensive plays in baseball. In one play, an out is recorded _and_
a player who was on base (usually) is removed. Thus Bill James
suggested the more aggresive moniker Baserunner Kills.
So it is a raw number, and is somewhat significant (though it can only
be made truly significant by adding in the number of extra bases given
up) as a raw number _because_ of the importance of the event.
Joe
|
88.2732 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Tue Mar 05 1996 10:04 | 4 |
| > Greenwell as a starting LF'er early on in his career when he was driving
> in runs and being productive at the plate.
Exactly why Mo Vaughn's defensive play will never be an issue.
|
88.2733 | No Alicea,no division; you heard it here | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Tue Mar 05 1996 10:11 | 11 |
| Well Alicea the virtual lynch-pin of the infield defense is being
shopped around and Luis feels he will be released if not traded because
of his salary and Nomar and Juan Bell and Rodriguez being around.
I am on record that this (Cordero for Alicea) will be a disaster and
cost the Sox the division. Glenn thinks I'm overreacting.
'Saw, one thing Yaz did was make big plays at crucial moments,
something stats don't tell you about. But his range was pretty limited
as was his arm after 1970. But he always looked good out there,
something Greenwell never mastered.
|
88.2734 | I agree with Billte - the rivers run red with blood! | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Tue Mar 05 1996 10:54 | 0 |
88.2735 | Reality check... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Tue Mar 05 1996 11:33 | 20 |
|
> -< hope its that overated/overhyped Naerhing >-
Spring is upon us... Jerry's bashing one of the few players on
the team who when healthy (yes I know how important that is) can
hit _and_ field (yes, Timmy can throw around the leather more
than adequately).
> 5) O'Leary is a great 4th outfielder. Although Greenwell is a good
> 5th outfielder.
This is another DNC (C == compute). If O'Leary is a 4th outfielder,
then a lifetime .305 hitter with decent extra-base power (better than
O'Leary's over the long haul) does not sit behind him. O'Leary's arm
is even weaker than Greenwell's. On this score Billte is correct;
Greenwell has taken far too much criticism than a true professional
hitter deserves.
glenn
|
88.2736 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Mar 05 1996 11:34 | 5 |
| Didn't Williams, Yaz, and Rice take the ball right off the wall?
Seems Greenwell, like the visitors, always takes it on the bounce.
George
|
88.2737 | Somehow, someway, pre-1995, 28 clubs survived w/o Luis Alicea | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Tue Mar 05 1996 11:45 | 10 |
|
> I am on record that this (Cordero for Alicea) will be a disaster and
> cost the Sox the division. Glenn thinks I'm overreacting.
Billte, I don't think you've overreacted to anything in your life.
For a Red Sox fan you're probably undercompensating for this truly
tragic turn of events... ;-)
glenn
|
88.2738 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Mar 05 1996 13:22 | 13 |
|
> I am on record that this (Cordero for Alicea) will be a disaster and
> cost the Sox the division. Glenn thinks I'm overreacting.
Glenn's not the only one...
Alicea's handy to have around; the Sox might do well to keep him
as a utility infielder.
But he's not the kind of player who brings you championships; Cordero
is.
Joe
|
88.2739 | Aint the first time I've been here | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Tue Mar 05 1996 14:04 | 17 |
|
I may be over-estimating O'Leary a bit mainly 'cause I like him but
to say Greenwell has better extra-base power I don't buy it. They both
hit about 10-12 dingers with roughly the same amount of doubles.
O'Leary is a better baserunner the Greenwell. As far as Naerhing goes
your hit the nail on the head Glenn....
"Spring is upon us... Jerry's bashing one of the few players on
the team who when healthy (yes I know how important that is) can
hit _and_ field" Healthy is da key.
I just think that Cordero has much more upside than Naerhing and
Alicea is a very good 2B'man. Personally I'd take an infield of
Vaughn, Alicea, Valentin and Cordero. But I know I'm in the minority
thinkin Tim is a stiff.
|
88.2740 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Mar 05 1996 14:15 | 14 |
| Here are some Numbers including Runs Created, Runs Created per game, Total
Bases, etc. The rest should be obvious.
Name Rc Rcg gms avr Ab Ht Hr Tb Sb BB So
Tim Naehring 78.682 7.035 126 0.307 433 133 10 194 0 77 66
Mike Greenwell 76.773 6.043 120 0.297 481 143 15 221 9 38 35
Wil Cordero 71.569 5.195 131. 0.286 514 147 10 216 9 36 88
Troy O'Leary 69.307 6.707 112 0.308 399 123 10 196 5 29 64
Luis Alicea 55.228 4.719 132 0.270 419 113 6 157 13 63 61
I believe that this was the 1st year Naehring played a full season without
being injured.
George
|
88.2741 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Tue Mar 05 1996 16:40 | 14 |
| If Alicea as a hitter was simply overmatched, like Pena was in 1993
then I'd look for a replacement. But if the Sox are just looking for a
place to stick Cordero's bat and think they'll get away with a stiff at
second base then Duquette is an utter fool.
The smart thing would be to work Cordero into the lineup and play all
four and make a final decision after the all-star break. Cordero has
said he doesn't want to play both outfield and infield, too bad.
Valentin is obviously the ss for 150-155 games.
Any chance of trading Alicea is now out the window since the Sox have
seemingly indicated they'll release him rather than pay 1.5 mil for the
50 games they have him slated at utility. California would be a
natural to pick him up.
|
88.2742 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Tue Mar 05 1996 22:52 | 12 |
| I think it would be a mistake for the Sox to get rid of Alicea. I
don't know if he has any experience at 3B, but Tim has only put
together 1 in a row of injury-free seasons. Now, if a trade of Alicea
plus somebody could bring a quality outfielder, I'd seriously consider
it. That appears to be the biggest question mark of the everyday
players.
It does look like the Sox are going to try to outscore their opponents
this year as opposed to finessing them with pitching and defense. Look
what happened to the Indians in the Series, and I think they were a
much better defensive team than Boston. What wins in a short series is
most often [but not always] pitching and defense.
|
88.2743 | Cordero is a stud. | CSLALL::BRULE | SNOW SUCKS | Wed Mar 06 1996 08:32 | 12 |
| Before last year Alicea never played a full year because of injuries,
or being beaten out by Geronima Pena or others. Cordero is an all star.
If Alicea was a golden glove winner there might be some arguement about
losing his defense. People last year were complaining about his lack of
range. Cordero is only 24! Most of his errors come from throwing. He is
a major talent who IMO best days are in front of him. Alicea is a good
solid average ML player.
My question is how long are they going to be able to keep Garciapara
down. From the few games I've seen of him this spring he's just about
ready.
But WTH. When is the last time the Red Sox had this much depth?
Mike
|
88.2744 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Wed Mar 06 1996 08:54 | 19 |
| > But WTH. When is the last time the Red Sox had this much depth?
Exactly. It's a *nice* problem.
I think the best answer was mentioned earlier - keep all four and use one
of Naehring/Alicea/Cordero as the utility guy to spell the other three.
I know Naehring has played all three positions, and believe Alicea has played
2B and SS.
I wouldn't screw around with moving Valentin anywhere.
Honestly, I think the answer (if Cordero's arm is OK) is:
Alicea 2B
Valentin SS
Cordero 3B
Naehring utility
...since Naehring has the worst injury history of the bunch, and has played
all three spots.
|
88.2745 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Mar 06 1996 09:16 | 5 |
| Unless he's traded, as long as Naehring is hitting he'll probably start at
3rd. They can always start Cordero at 2nd then use Alicea for a late inning
defensive replacement.
George
|
88.2746 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | I'm tired of SNOW.... | Wed Mar 06 1996 09:45 | 6 |
|
Nomar will start the year at AAA, why? Until enough games are
played at the MLB level, which will push Nomars date for arbitration
eligibility out 1 extra year. The Sox do it with every prospect.
Ron
|
88.2747 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Mar 06 1996 09:54 | 5 |
|
Well, there's also the fact that he hasn't yet demonstrated that
he can _hit_...
Joe
|
88.2748 | | CSLALL::BRULE | SNOW SUCKS | Wed Mar 06 1996 11:01 | 8 |
| Re
Joe a .267 in AA ain't bad along with 30+ SB. I really believe that a
SS shouldn't need to hit. I grew up a huge Mark Belanger and Bud
Harrelson fan and the number of runs they saved with their defense more
then offset their lack of production.
Nomar has looked very good so far this spring.
Mike
|
88.2749 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Wed Mar 06 1996 11:08 | 4 |
| > I really believe that a SS shouldn't need to hit.
But these are the Red Sox we're talking about. Hitting (no matter what
position) is more important than fielding.
|
88.2750 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Mar 06 1996 11:14 | 41 |
|
> Joe a .267 in AA ain't bad along with 30+ SB.
Well, it all depends. .267 w/ 30+ SB doesn't give you a lot of
information.
Did Nomar hit for power? No, not really.
Did Nomar walk much? Not a whole lot.
Does Nomar have a future as a hitter? Sure. He's young enough
that his performance was _encouraging_.
I very sincerely doubt he's ready to hit in the majors; if he is,
than a couple of months in AAA will prove it.
> I really believe that a
> SS shouldn't need to hit. I grew up a huge Mark Belanger and Bud
> Harrelson fan and the number of runs they saved with their defense more
> then offset their lack of production.
I disagree completely. You can _accept_ a SS who can't hit, like
Ozzie Smith in his early days, if his total contribution (and, if
he's young, anticipated progress) is better than other available
options.
Right now, the Red Sox have Naehring, Valentin, and Cordero in the
infield. Valentin hits a very loud .300; Naehring and Cordero hit
somewhat loud .300s. Nomar, at this point, is likely to hit a
quiet .250. He _does_ have the advantage of being young, and thus
worth considering for his potential to progress (Cordero's in the
same boat); even so, I can't see any reasonable argument for
starting him _this_ year. Any improvement in defense, unless you
sit Cordero, is likely to be margainal. Let him progress in AAA,
while considering trade offers for Naehring.
> Nomar has looked very good so far this spring.
No doubt; however, you've got the problem of a small sample size.
Joe
|
88.2751 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Mar 06 1996 11:17 | 15 |
| Mark Belanger was actually able to make offensive contributions because Earl
Weaver was his coach. Although Belanger's offense was not great, there were
special cases where he could hit if the combination of turf/carpet, day/night,
pitcher, situation, etc. was right.
Normally that wouldn't mean much but Weaver was an expert micro manager of
that sort of detail and would get the right player up at bat in the right
situation. You'd often see him bringing a guy like Belanger up to bat at a
critical time only to find out that where he usually hit .220, against this
pitcher on this surface, at this time of day he was hitting .460.
As for Kennedy, he's good, but he's no Earl Weaver. In fact, no one is Earl
Weaver. Too bad, I loved to watch him coach.
George
|
88.2752 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Wed Mar 06 1996 11:30 | 4 |
| > As for Kennedy, he's good, but he's no Earl Weaver. In fact, no one is Earl
>Weaver. Too bad, I loved to watch him coach.
FWIW, Weaver was named to the Hall of Fame yesterday along with 3 others.
|
88.2753 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Wed Mar 06 1996 11:46 | 20 |
| Read an article by an umpire about ten years ago about Earl Weaver.
Seems that Earl would load up his mouth early in the game with a lot of
tobacco. He'd work on that big wad of chaw all game.
Now, if an umpire happened to piss ol' Earl off, out he'd come. Earl would
pull his ball cap around backwards, so's he could get right into that ump's
face.
At that point, Earl would argue with the ump, using every word in his
vocabularly that either began with the letter "P" or else had a lot of
"P"s in it.
You can imagine what the ump's face looked and felt like afterwards.....
Good ol' Earl.
'Saw
|
88.2754 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Wed Mar 06 1996 11:51 | 22 |
|
re .2744
> Honestly, I think the answer (if Cordero's arm is OK) is:
> Alicea 2B
> Valentin SS
> Cordero 3B
> Naehring utility
Whoa somebody actually agrees with me on the Naehring/Alicea
situation. I thought I was totally alone Roland many thanks.
Alicea although didn't win a gold glove, (hit didn't hit well
enough to), he is a very good secondbaseman. His range is as
good as most better than average. Defensively he is a better
2B'man than Naehring with the edge offensively to Naehring. I'm
not convinced that Naehring's offensive is enough to play him
over Luis at 2B and Cordero has much more upside potential than
Naehring does.
Jerry
|
88.2755 | Like Earl, I'm right, and I'm looking for a beef ;-) | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Wed Mar 06 1996 15:06 | 19 |
|
> Mark Belanger was actually able to make offensive contributions because Earl
> Weaver was his coach. Although Belanger's offense was not great, there were
> special cases where he could hit if the combination of turf/carpet, day/night,
> pitcher, situation, etc. was right.
>
> Normally that wouldn't mean much but Weaver was an expert micro manager of
> that sort of detail and would get the right player up at bat in the right
> situation. You'd often see him bringing a guy like Belanger up to bat at a
> critical time
Huh? Belanger was an everyday starting player at shortstop, for his
defense. The only micro-managing going on around Belanger's spot in
the order was sitting his butt on the pine for a pinch-hitter in the
late innings, like the 9th-place-hitting pitcher-at-the-plate he
was...
glenn
|
88.2756 | Timmy is Timmy, not to be messed with... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Wed Mar 06 1996 15:11 | 13 |
|
> I'm not convinced that Naehring's offensive is enough to play him
> over Luis at 2B and Cordero has much more upside potential than
> Naehring does.
Naehring will outslug and out-onbase Alicea by at least 50 points
each (last year the difference was 75 and 50). That's a big
difference in offense that will probably only get bigger, if
anything. This is pure Timmy-hate showing through. Timmy must
injure his way out of the 3B position at this point...
glenn
|
88.2757 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Mar 06 1996 15:14 | 21 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2755 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Pride of Steel" >>>
> Huh? Belanger was an everyday starting player at shortstop, for his
> defense. The only micro-managing going on around Belanger's spot in
> the order was sitting his butt on the pine for a pinch-hitter in the
> late innings, like the 9th-place-hitting pitcher-at-the-plate he
> was...
No, there were times when his butt was not put on the pine because Earl
knew that he could hit in that particular situation.
I remember seeing this once. I think it was in post season. Belanger came up
late in the game with guys on base and the announcers couldn't understand why
Earl didn't pinch hit but Belanger came through with a hit.
A bit later someone either got word from the bench or figured out themselves
that Weaver had looked at his computer outputs and discovered that against that
pitcher on that type of surface at that time of day Belanger was hitting around
.400. I think it was Palmer who said that Weaver did that all the time.
George
|
88.2758 | And Picasso painted by numbers, right? | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Wed Mar 06 1996 15:28 | 6 |
|
>> A bit later someone either got word from the bench or figured
>> out themselves that Weaver had looked at his computer outputs
I seriously doubt it.
|
88.2759 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Wed Mar 06 1996 15:39 | 10 |
|
George is kind of right.
Weaver didn't use computer outputs - he kept all kinds of situational
stats on note cards, and referenced them constantly. It's something
you'd use a computer for today - he did the work by hand.
This habit is one of the reasons he's considered by a lot of folks to
be the forerunners of the modern-day manager (example being his second
baseman, Davey Johnson).
|
88.2760 | Then he went Union | CSLALL::BRULE | SNOW SUCKS | Wed Mar 06 1996 15:44 | 10 |
| About the only pitchers Belanger hit regularly were Nolan Ryan and
just about anyone who pitched for the Red Sox. :^)
I remember in the early 70's Belanger had a weekly radio show during
the off season. He was a very good talker. I remember him saying that
ML batters would actually see the rotation of the ball when thrown and
were able to tell what the pitch coming was. He used to tell some good
stories.
I also remeber him having to work at the local Anderson Little in the
winter.
|
88.2761 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Wed Mar 06 1996 15:54 | 12 |
| I take it the Anderson Little was out by Pittsfield. My first memory
of Belanger was in the New England Basketball tournement at the garden
circa 1962,63; just about its last year. He could have played at any
college, I wonder if he has any regrets.
I second him hitting vs Boston. I think he got a top ten standing in
the annual mvp award voting a few of those years. If 90% of the
American League players of the 1970s were to name him their first pick
at shortstop for that decade would that be grounds for the HoF.
He'd probably be in the top five "best player of the '70s" at least on
the pitcher's ballots.
|
88.2762 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Wed Mar 06 1996 17:37 | 12 |
| > Huh? Belanger was an everyday starting player at shortstop, for his
> defense. The only micro-managing going on around Belanger's spot in
> the order was sitting his butt on the pine for a pinch-hitter in the
> late innings, like the 9th-place-hitting pitcher-at-the-plate he
> was...
>
> glenn
Not every year. For example, Bobby Grich started quite a number of games
at shortstop in 1973 instead of Belanger (I believe it was 1973), with
Belanger coming in the ball game later on.
|
88.2763 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Thu Mar 07 1996 06:21 | 5 |
|
Whatever Glenn. Point is Cordero has more upside than Naerhing and
with the way the Sox will score runs this year I'd take Luis over Tim
anyday. Even if I did like the stiff I'd still take Luis.
|
88.2764 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Mar 07 1996 09:03 | 5 |
|
Taking Alicea over Naehring makes _no_ sense. You gain nothing
signficant defensively, and take away a lot of offense in the process.
Joe
|
88.2765 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Thu Mar 07 1996 09:14 | 13 |
| that's because you hold on to the delusion that statistics can reveal
something about the value of Alicea at 2b, whose abilities to make the
complicated plays at second gave confidence to the pitching staff vs
Nhaering who is solidly mediocre much as Cordero could be at 3b.
The problem isn't the statistics it's the mistakes that the Cordero's
and Vaughns make. Quite often they are judgement mistakes or plays
simply not made but not errors. I can't guarantee that Cordero would
mess the infield up sight unseen just like I couldn't guarantee that
Alicea would solidify a bogus infield last year.
But if you want to screw things up, mess around with second base or
centerfield.
|
88.2766 | | CSLALL::BRULE | SNOW SUCKS | Thu Mar 07 1996 10:22 | 10 |
| >I take it the Anderson Little was out by Pittsfield. My first memory
>of Belanger was in the New England Basketball tournement at the garden
>circa 1962,63; just about its last year. He could have played at any
>college, I wonder if he has any regrets.
Yup downtown Pittsfield.
I don't remember his basketball days (I was only 4 in 62) but there was
a great sportscaster in North Adams named Bucky Bullett. He always said
that Mark was the best High School bball player to ever play in the
Berkshires.
|
88.2767 | | XTATIC::CHILDS | Harry Browne for President! | Thu Mar 07 1996 10:35 | 4 |
|
dam I was 9 in 62. thank God for Billte, Lee, Steve, Nazz and Kev......
;^)
|
88.2768 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Mar 07 1996 10:35 | 11 |
|
> that's because you hold on to the delusion that statistics can reveal
> something about the value of Alicea at 2b,
Actually, the statistics that we have suggest that Alicea's very
good defensively.
I think Alicea's valuable; I just believe that Naehring and Cordero
are _more_ valuable.
Joe
|
88.2769 | Pittsfield. ..... Red Sox at Wachonah Park | RDWOLF::KUPIEC | | Thu Mar 07 1996 12:44 | 5 |
| Anderson Little was out in Allendale.. Mark B worked at Besse Clarke in
beautiful downtown Pittsfield. His brother was the a high school basketball
coach.
Chris
|
88.2770 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Thu Mar 07 1996 14:27 | 14 |
|
Joe my whole point is the Sox are gonna score runs so why not go with
the best defensive player at a certian position when you have the
chance without hurting the offensive. God Naerhing had ONE decent
year. I've played tons of baseball in my life and never on any team
I've ever played on would take a sieve over a sure handed 2B'man purely
based on offensive. SS, 2B and CF have to be very sure handed and I'm
still not convinced that Naerhing's offensive output is significant
enough to play him over Alicea. Flaw in my way of thinking is KK has
Cordero at 2B. Not a good spot for a guy with a sore shoulder, but
what do I know.
Jerry
|
88.2771 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Mar 07 1996 14:34 | 23 |
|
> Joe my whole point is the Sox are gonna score runs so why not go with
> the best defensive player at a certian position when you have the
> chance without hurting the offensive.
Well, Alicea _would_ have to save fewer runs than the additional
runs Naehring would score, most likely, but I still wouldn't do it.
The difference defensively is minimal, whereas offensively they're
miles apart...
> God Naerhing had ONE decent year.
Actually, he's had four; '90, '93, '94, and '95. '95 was just the
first decent _full_ year.
Double checking things, though, the choice isn't as obvious as I
thought. Naehring _does_ have a clear offensive advantage, but it's
not nearly as large as I'd thought.
Given that, it might prove a neutral move. I'd still sit (but keep)
Alicea...
Joe
|
88.2772 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Any one have a good dogsled team? | Thu Mar 07 1996 14:44 | 1 |
| How many "decent years has Alicea had? 1 or 2.
|
88.2773 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Mar 07 1996 14:46 | 7 |
| Bill, I think Naehring is better than you think. Granted he's not Frank
Malzone or Wade Boggs but he's not that bad either.
In any case, if you are right and he does suddenly turn into a pumpkin
Kennedy can put Alicea in at any time.
George
|
88.2774 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Thu Mar 07 1996 15:15 | 9 |
| Naehring is pretty good, I wouldn't knock him except Cordero promises
to hit with more power but he has to prove it in the American league.
My question is if we had consistency at second base and a guy who
improved at the bat all year long why mess with that?
Also, the point made earlier in the week was about Alicea being traded
if possible and if not simply released in order not to pay his 1.5.
The sox have until sometime in May to make that final decision and save
1.2 out of the figure.
|
88.2775 | Weaver was smarter than this... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Mar 07 1996 15:15 | 18 |
|
> Not every year. For example, Bobby Grich started quite a number of games
> at shortstop in 1973 instead of Belanger (I believe it was 1973), with
> Belanger coming in the ball game later on.
There was one year with Grich, 1972, and a couple later when Belanger
was old, with Kiko Garcia. But Belanger was coming in as a defensive
replacement. I won't say that Belanger never pinch-hit, but when he did,
it was to bunt or move a runner along, or out of desperation. Believe
me, I followed this team religiously every day on TV and radio, and
Earl Weaver was certainly a magician, but no magic could make Mark Belanger
a good hitter by employing him situationally. Weaver made light fun of
Belanger's bat (about the best you could say about it was that Belanger
was patient at the plate, and got on base more than any no-power
.230-hitting stick had any right to).
glenn
|
88.2776 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Mar 07 1996 15:26 | 9 |
|
> My question is if we had consistency at second base and a guy who
> improved at the bat all year long why mess with that?
Simple. You don't _get_ many championship quality players; Cordero
might just be one. Therefore, put Cordero wherever makes the most
sense (2nd base, given that Valentin's at SS) and live with the rest...
Joe
|
88.2777 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Thu Mar 07 1996 15:35 | 12 |
| You don't win a championship with a chump at second base. If Alicea is
not around and we find that Cordero just can't do it second then we
scramble. Now I absolutely don't know if Cordero can do it or not;
perhaps Kennedy and White and Johnson will know by May, the latter two
ought to know.
But you can bank on this - they won't be using any statistics to make
that decision and nothing anyone does offensively will go into that
decision. It will be what they actually see down in Florida with their
eyes. The worst thing would be for Johnson to know that Cordero can't
do it and have Cordero hit lights out in the spring and they stick him
out there anyway.
|
88.2778 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Mar 07 1996 15:44 | 17 |
|
> But you can bank on this - they won't be using any statistics to make
> that decision
I _very_ much doubt this. Managers might not use the same tools
that sabremathematicians use, but still - I'll bet you Kennedy
knows, when he's making his decisions, the batting averages of
his candidates, their HR totals, their error totals, and so on.
> and nothing anyone does offensively will go into that
> decision.
This too I doubt. I'm sure they _will_ consider defense. They
should; it's clearly part of the job. But it's not the whole of
the job, and baseball people know that.
Joe
|
88.2779 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Thu Mar 07 1996 16:07 | 11 |
| Joe you raise an interesting question. I wonder what managers
today do use statistics and to what degree. I doubt the old managers
dating back to McGraw and Mack used them much at all but in those days
pure genius was more apt to find itself on a ball field or machine shop
as opposed to a physics lab or boardroom. Some of those guys just had
an intuition as to the right things to do - how does anyone explain a
Casey Stengel and his methods which worked (statistically) so well for
15 years.
I still say that I doubt they'd let statistics even today overrule
their senses.
|
88.2780 | HAL - the coach of the future! (and I don't mean the Clevelander) | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Thu Mar 07 1996 17:30 | 9 |
| C'mon Billy Boy, do you really think the baseball managers
of the MBL could survive on instincts? Would you buy a
car or a house on instincts? Get into the 90's! It's the
information age. Soon you'll see third base coaches with
wrist watch size monitors tied remotely into data bases.
billl
|
88.2781 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Fri Mar 08 1996 08:30 | 3 |
|
Davey Johnson has been a computer guy for quite a while - I believe Kennedy
is to a lesser extent.
|
88.2782 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Fri Mar 08 1996 08:33 | 8 |
|
Man I hate missing extra points.
Chap
|
88.2783 | Cordero and computers | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Fri Mar 08 1996 09:26 | 20 |
| Interesting discussion of the Red Sox infield problems. I'm inclined to
agree with those who don't want to put a defensive stiff at 2B or SS, but
it's not yet clear whether Cordero will be a stiff or not. Certainly the
throw is easier than from the left side, though the double play pivot
could be a problem. If he can just play the position adequately, I'd use him,
because his bat can be superstar quality.
One thing I would *not* do is put him at third. His arm is too erratic and
Vaughn won't be a lot of help.
When it comes to evaluating players, you have to remember that managers and
coaches see them every day, so their instincts have a complete data base
to work on. Despite that, more and more managers are turning to computers
for assistance. As noted earlier, Earl Weaver was the pioneer, with his
index card data base, and Tony LaRussa was using them years ago, when his
A's were winning pennants. Casey Stengel championed the heavy usage of
left-right platooning; I wonder what he'd have done with the information
available to today's managers.
Steve
|
88.2784 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Mar 08 1996 11:08 | 17 |
| The way you guys are going at it over this 2nd base thing you'd think that
the manager had to make a decision at the start of the season and live with it
all year.
Keep in mind, he can make changes play to play. If Cordero's screwing up a
game at 2nd and not producing at the plate, Kennedy can lift him on the spot
and put Alicea in the game. Then he can try him again the next day, a few days
later, or when ever he feels like it.
Also, injuries will probably figure in, guys will pinch hit, situations will
call for late inning defensive replacements, etc.
In other news, Gil Santos of WBZ Radio said that the Sox will probably sign
Kevin Mitchel today. He says they plan to use him as a DH. Now if you really
want to see sparks at 2nd base give him a shot playing out there.
George
|
88.2785 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Any one have a good dogsled team? | Fri Mar 08 1996 11:16 | 2 |
| Mitchell and Vaugn would cover a lot of ground between 1st and 2nd.
|
88.2786 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Mar 08 1996 11:17 | 10 |
|
George,
I think the reason for the concern is the belief that Alicea will
be released.
I _am_ concerned about that - while I don't think he should start,
I'd want him around, as he is a useful player.
Joe
|
88.2787 | Greenwell at second? | RYNGET::DAMICO | | Fri Mar 08 1996 11:30 | 11 |
| With a 1.5 million dollar major league (ie garaunteed) contract I don't
think you'll see Alicea released so he'll be around if the experiment fails.
This seems to be much ado about nothing. Cordero is a a major league
middle infielder who can hit, hit for power and run. Alicia has been a
light hitting journeyman middle infielder for all but one of his 3/4/5 MLB
season. The benefit of sticking Cordero's bat at second will far outweigh
any loss of defense. They're asking a guy who's been a shortstop all his
life to play second. It's not like they're trying to gain some offense punch
by asking Mike Greenwell to play there and whilst Alicia is a fine defender,
he's not the second coming of Frank White.
|
88.2788 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Mar 08 1996 11:30 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2785 by CSLALL::BRULE "Any one have a good dogsled team?" >>>
> Mitchell and Vaugn would cover a lot of ground between 1st and 2nd.
That's for sure. They wouldn't need tarp. During rain they could just have
these guys lay down and they'd cover the infield.
I wonder what Mitchell looks like after spending a year in Japan? With any
luck his eating habits improved and he shook off a few pounds.
George
|
88.2789 | Hope springs eternal | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Fri Mar 08 1996 11:53 | 8 |
| Asst GM Port pointedly told reporters that the 1.5 mil is NOT
guaranteed, much to the chagrin of Alicea who thought it was.
I believe that a team has to have a plan for the entire defensive
approach including the juxtaposition of position and pitching. The
basis is stability at second base; they had it and now they will hope
to have it. Big difference, it's like Steve hoping that the Orioles
will be as good on the field as on paper.
|
88.2790 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The engineer formerly known as Roland | Fri Mar 08 1996 12:00 | 2 |
| Yup, guaranteed vs. non-guaranteed is the key. I think the Red Sox would
be foolish to release Alicea outright.
|
88.2791 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | I'm tired of SNOW.... | Fri Mar 08 1996 12:07 | 7 |
|
Alicea says that the contract is guaranteed because he signed
a contract and was not automatically renewed. The Sox say it doesn't
matter. So if Alicea is released an arbitrator will most likely have
to make a ruling.
Ron
|
88.2792 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Mar 08 1996 12:36 | 5 |
| ... If both sides agree to binding arbitration.
If not then like any contract case this could be headed to civil court.
George
|
88.2793 | I think Alicea will stick... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Fri Mar 08 1996 16:15 | 17 |
|
I think it'd be dumb for the Sox to release Alicea at the $1.5M
anyway. What's it amount to for this team compared to what Alicea
can provide even as a utility/insurance infielder? I strongly
suspect, or at least hope, that this idea that Alicea will be
cut outright was yet another head-up-his-bum "scoop" by Nick
Cafardo. That kind of thing, signing an established player, then
turning around and cutting him before the season starts to save
money, rarely happens in MLB. As I recall, the incompetent Pete
Peters tried it with the Pirates, and ended up losing the grievance,
because it is in violation of the player contract to cut a
_qualified_ player to rid yourself of his contract. In the Pirates'
case it was obvious that's what they did, and so it would seem to
do so with Alicea on trumped-up charges.
glenn
|
88.2794 | | SEGAD3::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Mon Mar 11 1996 06:14 | 18 |
|
Watched the Sox a bit yesterday didn't look to bad. About the
Yankmee game.....Its only spring Chappy and the Yankmees scored
all but 1 off the likes of Joes Hudson, Tomlin, Gunderson and the
like. Yup they'll all be comming north. While the Sox roughed up
Petite (sp) for 4 runs in 4 innings. Not sure what to really make
of the Mitchell signing. To be honest I sorta like it. If he can
get about 300 ab's, and if and its a big IF, he comes in in decent
shape should hit about 15-18 HR's. Thats pretty good production
off the bench. Course he could come in at about 600lbs too.
If this isn't poetic justice don't know what is....My father-in-law
came back from FLA yesterday and brought the kids some gifts. He
hands me a an autographed ball for my son. Hey Glen betcha can't
guess who signed it.
Jerry
|
88.2795 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Tue Mar 12 1996 10:49 | 1 |
| Dick Radditz?
|
88.2796 | Hitter + fielder + clubhouse presence = a keeper | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Wed Mar 13 1996 12:26 | 14 |
|
> If this isn't poetic justice don't know what is....My father-in-law
> came back from FLA yesterday and brought the kids some gifts. He
> hands me a an autographed ball for my son. Hey Glen betcha can't
> guess who signed it.
Not only isn't it just poetic justice, Jerry, it's justice period.
"Timmy" just happens to be the most decent guy on a team with more
than a few nice guys on the roster (these are not your father's Red
Sox). Naehring is the Brooks Robinson of this team, the guy who
just can't say no...
glenn
|
88.2797 | Good bye, Alicea; good bye division | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Wed Mar 13 1996 15:04 | 1 |
|
|
88.2798 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Mar 13 1996 15:07 | 7 |
|
> -< Good bye, Alicea; good bye division >-
No, not really. The sox hopes haven't really significantly changed;
they're still dependent upon the quality of the starters.
Joe
|
88.2799 | no impact.. | RYNGET::DAMICO | | Wed Mar 13 1996 15:11 | 8 |
| > -< Good bye, Alicea; good bye division >-
Shake a tree and 100 Luis Alicea's fall out and and only one Wil
Cordero. The only impact will be if someone gets hurt and
Garciaparra isn't ready to step in. I think Garciaparra's strong
spring made the Sox feel they could do this and save the
million bucks.
|
88.2800 | Therer is now way they can give him Dewey's # | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Wed Mar 13 1996 15:50 | 16 |
|
I don't think I've ever said Naehring was a jerk/butthole or anything
like that. He is often injured and I think that should be factored into
the Sox making decisions about the infield. For the Sox sake I hope he
has another injury free year and produces like last year. If Beltre has
shown signs of being a solid backup I guess its no "real" loss but what
has Beltre done over his career? Rushing Nomar to the show may be a bit
of a mistake but who knows, maybe he can live up to the pressure, if so
do it. I just don't want to see him riding pine/late inning sub for D.
Any Mitchell sightings yet? Guess he's had problems getting from sunny
California to rainy Florida. I just think he hit an all you can eat rib
joint in Dallas and missed his connection.
Jerry
|
88.2801 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | SPORTS 1995 NOTY & RED_SOX Most Knowledgeable Noter Award! | Wed Mar 13 1996 17:06 | 3 |
88.2802 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Thu Mar 14 1996 05:57 | 4 |
|
I did not use the term crush but the idea is the same.
|
88.2803 | Mods, please delete and villify me if this is against the law | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Mar 14 1996 12:38 | 24 |
|
For many (maybe half) of the Sox' weekend games this year, both
Saturdays and Sundays, on short notice (as little as a week) I'll
be looking to move one, or both, pairs of my bleacher seats (decent
ones: Section 35, Row 5). I'd like to set up a mailing list for
those who might be interested in picking up a game or two along
the way. Given the circumstances of that short notice, uncommitted
arrangement (I don't know how many, or which, games will be available),
I wouldn't ask for the full price of the tickets, but might be
persuaded to accept a charitable contribution of, say, $6/ticket
(one-third off), to offset my expenses at the concessions for the
games I do go. ;-)
Basically, I'd rather move these tickets than have them go unused,
as some did last season. I'd try and broadcast a message to their
availability on a Monday or Tuesday before the weekend games, and
make it first-come, first-serve on the response.
If interested, send me mail at EDWIN::WAUGAMAN, and I'll put you
on the list.
glenn
|
88.2804 | | CAM::WAY | There's the devil to pay! | Thu Mar 14 1996 13:27 | 5 |
| > -< Mods, please delete and villify me if this is against the law >-
Hell, it don't have to be against the law for us to villify you...
|
88.2805 | it's a no-brainer | TNPUBS::ALVEY | When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro | Fri Mar 22 1996 10:24 | 5 |
| How come the only people surprized that
Canseco in right didn't work are Duquette and Kennedy?
dr.a
|
88.2806 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Mar 22 1996 10:37 | 6 |
| They're probably not that surprised. DD seems to like to run experiments.
My guess is that the real plan is that Mitchel and Canseco will platoon but
it won't be between righties and lefties, it will be between the DH and the DL.
George
|
88.2807 | what a plan | TNPUBS::ALVEY | When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro | Fri Mar 22 1996 10:48 | 4 |
| But both have incentives built into their
contracts based on plate appearances.
Neither of them is going to be happy.
|
88.2808 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Mar 22 1996 11:31 | 15 |
|
Discounting the outfield, between the two of them they will be in one of 4
states during the season:
1). Canseco DH Mitchel DH
2). Canseco DH Mitchel DL
3). Canseco DL Mitchel DH
4). Canseco DL Mitchel DL
Case 1). is the only one where they have to compete for the DH spot and
it's not likely to span that many games. If it does and one or the other of
them is put into the outfield then most likely one of the other cases will
follow shortly.
George
|
88.2809 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri Apr 05 1996 11:25 | 16 |
| Well, I've watched a bit of the Red Sox so far this year, and all I can say is:
They Suck. 8^)
This guy Cordero is making it hard to believe that he was worth letting Alicea
go. So far I mean.
Greenwell, well, that's all I need to say.
Naerhing was great last night with guys in scoring position....8^)
Gonna be a long season....
'Saw
|
88.2810 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Apr 05 1996 12:39 | 24 |
| The last few days the Sox have made me feel like a kid again. Reminds me of
those frustrating days back in the late 50's and early 60's when they would
consistently be one of the top hitting clubs but the pitching stunk and they
were always kicking the ball around, chasing after a dropped pop fly, or
throwing the ball into the stands.
But deep down in I feel it is different. There are several experiments going
on right now and the sooner they are over the better.
- Conseco is suppose to play his 1st regular season game in right field today
as Kevin mitchell returns to the lineup. The defense goes down another
notch. Hopefully this won't last long.
- Tim ("I want a 2 year contract") Wakefield is down to fumes. When his
magic is working fine, but he's now gone 1-8 since his 15-1 run. The
place to rediscover the knuckler is in Trenton or Pawtucket, not Boston.
- The bumbling and fumbling infield will take 2nd seat to the outfield from
hell but somehow this need to be addressed as well.
The team should start hitting soon. I have a good feeling about Sele and
Clemens pitching in K.C. The team should pick up some wins.
George
|
88.2811 | an equalizer | SALEM::DODA | Workin' on mysteries without any clues | Fri Apr 05 1996 12:45 | 3 |
| KC's infield is even worse than the sox...
daryll
|
88.2812 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Mon Apr 08 1996 09:24 | 4 |
| Red Sox finally got a victory yesterday. I was beginning to think the only way
they would do that was to play themselves.
This team isn't going anywhere though....
|
88.2813 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 08 1996 09:59 | 11 |
| I still think they will do OK.
I'm hoping that the reason they sent Jeff Suppan to the minors was to get him
some starts with the idea of working him into the rotation in place of
Wakefield. Then with Tom Gordon over the flu the rotation won't look half bad.
This team is still a couple years away from being 1st class contender but
they are coming along nicely. They sure are a lot more fun to watch now then
there were before Dan Duquette.
George
|
88.2814 | I'm talking about Saturday afternoon of course | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Mon Apr 08 1996 11:25 | 12 |
| Fun to watch????
This team is even a disaster to listen to. I keep trying not to bury
them to early but this wholesale surrender to the concept of baseball
fundementals is to much.
Speaking of listening to the debacle, Trupiano does more with tone than
slick-schtick, hear-me-whine McDonough could ever do with his second
guessing. I hope Duquette hasn't created a disaster which will take
half a decade to get out of. I'd like to see this team dive into last
place quick and enable a complete turnover to youth, desire and
fundementals.
|
88.2815 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 08 1996 11:47 | 10 |
| It's not going to happen. They are going to get it turned around and they
should run at a clip that would have them about 10 games out by end of season.
If they have unusually good luck, they'll win or get a wild card. Unusually
bad luck and I still feel they will be just under .500.
This club just as too much power and pitching to flop around at the bottom
of the league.
George
|
88.2816 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Mon Apr 08 1996 11:48 | 10 |
| The posted an interesting stat in yesterday's paper.
It concerned worst Red Sox starts. It went from 0-3, through like 0-8, and the
year and the final records for those years.
In only one instance out of say, ten years when they had abyssmal starts, did
they have a winning record.
Not good.
|
88.2817 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 08 1996 12:21 | 17 |
| That doesn't look like very good statistics. First of all, unless they had
around 30 or so seasons listed, the sample size is too small and the margin for
error is too large.
And even if they do have a large sample size, it only predicts a bad season
if you believe that the team was playing about the way they should throughout
the year which is not the case.
Of the 5 losses, one was pitched by Gordon while he had the flu and one was
pitched by Wakefield who will either get his knuckler working or get shipped
out. Since they have Suppan and a couple other promising rookies, things
should get better.
I also believe their hitting will be better than what we've seen so far. The
team that racked up that start was not playing up to potential.
George
|
88.2818 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Mon Apr 08 1996 12:30 | 1 |
| Well, Jesus, George, it wasn't like I ran it through my PC or anything! 8^)
|
88.2819 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 08 1996 12:33 | 4 |
| This sort of thing would go better on an Alpha.
:*)}
George
|
88.2820 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Apr 08 1996 12:36 | 6 |
|
Wild prediction du jour...
The Sox will win the AL East.
Joe
|
88.2821 | Current team make-up is cold-weather disaster... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Mon Apr 08 1996 12:53 | 10 |
|
> The Sox will win the AL East.
Just don't look for them to do well in April, in the cold weather.
They're going to dig a hole, then start the business of climbing out
by around mid-May. But this will be a winning team, hopefully a
90-win team though, not an 82-win one.
glenn
|
88.2823 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 08 1996 13:28 | 8 |
| Most of the experts are picking Baltimore to win the A.L. East. The Red Sox
are splitting the rest of the votes with New York.
If one of those teams win and the Sox end up within a game or three of the
other that would be expected, not a choke. It would only be a choke of they
were passed by Detroit or Toronto.
George
|
88.2824 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Mon Apr 08 1996 14:44 | 6 |
|
Since Cleveland is playing in the WEAKEST division in baseball.
It will be a choke if they don't win the AL Central by at least 10
games.
Ron
|
88.2826 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 08 1996 15:33 | 10 |
| I wouldn't write the White Sox off that easily.
They've got some really talented young pitchers who seem to have trouble
finding the plate. If someone takes the time to go turn those kids toward the
big blue guy WITH the mask they could become a force again real quick.
Chicago, the one major league town that's gone longer than Boston without
a championship even though they kept both their teams. Go figure.
George
|
88.2827 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Tue Apr 09 1996 14:01 | 4 |
|
When have the White Sox most recently won the World Series?
|
88.2828 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 09 1996 14:11 | 15 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2827 by AWECIM::RUSSO "claimin!" >>>
> When have the White Sox most recently won the World Series?
Back in 1917 The White Sox beat John McGraws Giants with guys like Eddie
Collins, Red Farber, Ray Schack, and Shoeless Joe Jackson. It was the last
time they won. In 1919 they got into the World Series again but as the story
goes there was a payoff, several key players held back, they lost the series,
the following year the scandal broke and the rest is history.
Here's the trivia question for the day (I believe we've seen it before),
what National League team had their 1st World Series handed to them by the
Chicago Black Sox in 1919?
George
|
88.2829 | Cincinnati Reds | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Tue Apr 09 1996 14:22 | 0 |
88.2830 | The Reds... | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Apr 09 1996 14:22 | 0 |
88.2831 | the Reds | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Tue Apr 09 1996 14:30 | 0 |
88.2832 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 09 1996 14:34 | 8 |
| Bunches of correct answers, seconds apart. A Reds team run by Garry Herrmann
with guys named Edd Rough, Heinie Groh and Dolf Luque took the win from the
Black Sox.
Ok you wise guys, the following year this Red's team took 2 out of 3 in
baseball's last triple header. Who did they play?
George
|
88.2833 | mine's was plagurizism....... ;^) | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Tue Apr 09 1996 14:46 | 0 |
88.2834 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 09 1996 14:52 | 8 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2833 by XTATIC::CHILDS >>>
> -< mine's was plagurizism....... ;^) >-
In a way the Reds championship that year was plagiarism so I guess this time
we let you get away with it.
George
|
88.2835 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Apr 09 1996 15:25 | 14 |
|
Um...
How was the Red's championship plagiarism? Whatever the actions of
the Sox, the Reds played to win, and won. It's not entirely clear
that the Reds wouldn't have won anyway; they had a quite good team.
Joe (who doesn't know who the Reds matched up with in the triple
header - Pittsburgh rings a bell)
Actually, speaking of Pittsburgh and trivia - within the vicinity of
Pittsburgh there's at least one sign where Pittsburgh is intentionally
(and not incorrectly) spelled Pittsburg. Anyone know where? (It has
nothing to do with the Pirates, btw).
|
88.2836 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 09 1996 15:31 | 10 |
| Pittsburgh is correct for the last triple header.
Maybe the Reds would have won but it's not very likely. That Chicago team was
really good and had been consistently 1st or 2nd for a few years. The Red Sox
seemed to be the only team that could really play at their level.
The Reds seem to come out of nowhere and fell back into nowhere after they
won that championship.
George
|
88.2837 | Over/under on runs today is 13 | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Thanks UMass for a great season! | Tue Apr 09 1996 16:01 | 3 |
| Any score from Friendly Fenway?
NAZZ
|
88.2838 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 09 1996 16:09 | 5 |
| The Red Sox notes file is reporting 5-1 Red Sox in the middle of the 6th.
Hit KP7
George
|
88.2839 | Thanks for the score - that's all I wanted | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Thanks UMass for a great season! | Tue Apr 09 1996 16:12 | 4 |
| If I hit KP7, then I would add a conference I have no interest in
perusing. A lot of good Sox talk makes me nauseous.
NAZZ
|
88.2840 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 16 1996 10:27 | 15 |
| Ok, so it wasn't the Red Sox's finest weekend. For that matter it hasn't been
their finest April running off something like the worst start since the 50's
but hey, the season is young, hope springs eternal, this team is going to turn
things around.
On the silver lining side, Jeff Suppan pitched 5 no hit innings in AAA
Pawtucket early in the weekend. Suppan, who started the season in the bull pen,
was sent down to get his pitch count up so he would be available for use as a
starter. Although the Sox are denying it, no doubt he's in line to take Tim
Wakefield's spot in the rotation if Wakefield continues to get hammered.
On to Baltimore, the Rocket goes today,
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2842 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Apr 16 1996 12:46 | 10 |
| >their finest April running off something like the worst start since the 50's
>but hey, the season is young, hope springs eternal, this team is going to turn
>things around.
1945.
George is quickly becoming the Hal of Red Sox Fandom.
|
88.2843 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 16 1996 13:00 | 13 |
| Re <<< Note 88.2842 by CAM::WAY "and keep me steadfast" >>>
>George is quickly becoming the Hal of Red Sox Fandom.
Don't know about Hal, but I became a Red Sox fans back around 1960 when a
"first division" finish was considered a good year. I don't intent to stop any
day soon.
The Red Sox are going to turn it around. The Red Sox are going to start
winning.
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2844 | Duquette - Baseball Dummy | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Tue Apr 16 1996 15:12 | 20 |
| I believe 1958 was the sox last first division until 1967. '59 thru
'66 were horrific years that truly tried the patience.
I agree with Wakefield who's comments about how well he pitched was a
direct gauntlet throw at Duquette and Kennedy. I somewhat agree that
we have to be patient a while longer but so far "total incompetent"
seems to be the apt label. The pitching is NOT the problem. The
hitting is NOT the problem (same problem of clutch hitting they always
have). The problem is Duquette has changed 3 of the four key defensive
positions and the fourth appears to be the only one that needed
upgrading.
Dan is finally going to get to know this town if things don't pick
up which they well may. The road right now is the best place for this
team.
Duquette belongs in that add where the nba center walks in the room and
Russell and a few other legends size him up. Only Dan would meet
Mack,McGraw,Stengel and Durocher and the Lip would say "what makes you
think you know anything about this game?"
|
88.2845 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 16 1996 15:36 | 33 |
| <<< Note 88.2844 by AKOCOA::BREEN "You never can tell" >>>
> Dan is finally going to get to know this town if things don't pick
> up which they well may. The road right now is the best place for this
> team.
No, Dan won't be learning anything like that. He already knows how short
sighted and cynical Red Sox fans can be when the team drops a few games. He
grew up around here.
If this were Lou Gorman, yes he would be intimidated by Red Sox fans and try
some knee jerk solution. He admitted as much. I remember him on a post game
show a few years back saying that he could never do in Boston what the Indians
did which was to spend several down years building a champion.
Well Dan Duquette and John Harrington see things differently. They are taking
their lumps and doing what has to be done to build a contender. Rather than
getting some defensive 2nd baseman who's hits can't shatter glass for a quick
fix they've got Frank White working with Wil Cordero trying to turn him into
a real 2nd baseman.
Look back to 1990 at the Braves, it was the same thing. Jeff Blauser was
struggling as a third baseman in the process of being converted to a middle
infielder, Sid Bream was no defensive gem at 1st and Neon Deion had his share
of goofs in center but they were a team in progress of rebuilding. Once the
core was in shape they fixed the defensive problems then went on to be a
contender year after year.
This team is going to win. They've got a couple years to go but I believe
this team will be a power house in about a year or so and Duquette is finally
doing the things necessary to get that done.
George
|
88.2846 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Apr 16 1996 15:45 | 3 |
| George, keep taking your prozac.
I've got to say that I agree with Billte on this one.
|
88.2847 | | MYLIFE::mccarthy | Mike McCarthy SHR3-1/P32 237-2468 | Tue Apr 16 1996 15:50 | 4 |
| Sid Bream was with the Pirates. He signed with the Braves the
same year as Terry Pendleton.
Mike
|
88.2848 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Tue Apr 16 1996 16:00 | 13 |
|
Billthe is right. If the Sox keep going the way they are,
Duquette will find out what Big Tuna is finding out - that
the lustre of a big rep is inadquate protection against
the slings and arrows of a bloodthirsty press. They're just
getting started on Tuna and if the Pats turn in another
losing season Tuna will be char-broiled. Duquette is in an
even more tenuous position because the Sox hold a bigger
place in the heart of the Boston sports fan and a .167
winning percentage come July will draw actual gunfire.
Duquette may have heard about how harsh Boston fans and
sportswriters can be but if and when they start on him in
earnest it'll be like nothing he's ever gone through before.
|
88.2849 | Duquette was hired in 1994, just two years ago... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Tue Apr 16 1996 16:22 | 25 |
|
> The pitching is NOT the problem. The
> hitting is NOT the problem (same problem of clutch hitting they always
> have). The problem is Duquette has changed 3 of the four key defensive
> positions and the fourth appears to be the only one that needed
> upgrading.
Well, so far the pitching may not be the problem (that's inconclusive,
at best), but the hitting has very definitely been a _big_ problem.
It's not just been a lack of clutch hitting, but almost a totally
non-existent offense. I don't see that continuing. This team will
start hitting. That may be all they'll do, but I think they will
hit.
Duquette is not a moron (nor is Parcells, although I think Parcells'
overall strategy has been much more questionable). The lower and
middle piece of the Sox' minor league system (where the real prospects
live in today's pro baseball) is rated highly at present. Parcells,
of course, does not have the "hidden" development work going on in
the background. What are the strengths of Boston's top prospects?
Pitching and defense. They're just not here yet, and fans will
just have to be patient, or never see a winner.
glenn
|
88.2850 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 16 1996 16:33 | 54 |
| <<< Note 88.2848 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> Billthe is right. If the Sox keep going the way they are,
> Duquette will find out what Big Tuna is finding out - that
> the lustre of a big rep is inadquate protection against
> the slings and arrows of a bloodthirsty press.
As I said, he already knows that. Being a 1st rate GM Duquette knows what
most GMs know that it takes years to build a competitive baseball team. And
having grown up in the Boston area Duquette knows very well that if the Sox
lose 10 out of 12 games the sports press, catering to the more vocal and short
sighted of the Red Sox fans will be on him like wolves.
Lou Gorman's solution was to cave in and patch the dam. Like Duquette he knew
this wasn't the way to build a winner but his orders from Sullivan were to
win enough to keep filling the stands so that's what he did.
These days things are different. Duquette's deal with Harrington was that
he would come to Boston if he could do what it took to build a winner and
Harrington is going along. Harrington himself seems to have a 5 year plan to:
1). Do what he can to fix the problems in Major League baseball
2). Let Duquette do what it takes to build a winner
3). Build a new Stadium
4). Sell a winning team making a humongous profit for the Yawkee foundation.
When Sid Breem came to the Braves from the Pirates they had similar defensive
problems with Blauser learning to be a short stop, revolving catchers,
platooning centerfielders the works but they were building a powerhouse from
A ball on up and didn't care about defense short term.
That's where the Red Sox are right now. Will they catch heat from the press?
Sure but so what? Harrington and Duquette know that the Boston sports press
will dance at the end of the string turning into fawning hero worship as soon
as the team is rebuilt and starts to win. They know that the average memory
span of a Sox fan is about 2 weeks and that the Boston Sports press will do or
say anything to feed the masses what they want to hear.
Who cares what the sports press sings to the radio call in crowd? Let it
drip with cynicism and hate as the lower echelon of Boston sports fans struggle
to understand how their fate is tied in with Mo Vaughn's batting average and
how their lives have been throw into ruin by the unearned runs over the last
2 weeks. For once the Sox have a management that is willing to laugh off those
idiots and go about the task of building a baseball contender, what ever it
takes.
This team is the seeds of the team that will win the World Series around the
end of the century.
GO John Harrington!!!
GO Dan Duquette!!!
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2851 | What do you mean "Don't panic" | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Tue Apr 16 1996 16:49 | 27 |
| George your revisionist history of the brave might pass in some
quarters but I had a friend who had followed the braves literally since
they played in Boston, continuously. In 1991 with Belliard playing
shortstop, Pendleton at third and Nixon in center they finally had the
defense upon which their pitching COULD develop. You have your horse
and your cart turned around. By the time Blauser got back to short
(and he was much better defensively then than he was last year) the
pitching had developed confidence. They had a strong defensive
outfield, solid catching and Bream was an excellent defensive first
baseman.
Duquette last year had marginal pitching but the defense wasn't nearly
as bad as criticized but obviously not first rate. So he takes a
career minor leaguer and a bad shortstop and tosses them into center
and second and then questions the pitching for not striking everyone
out.
If what you are really saying is that the silver lining to this
disaster is that the prospects will be brought up now and we'll take
two fifth place finishes to develop a real team then fine.
He should simply waive Hosey, bench of option Cordero, have either
O'Leary or Cuyler in center and pray that Mitchell's bat can come
alive. He should probably bring Garciaperra up immediately.
Btw is Stanley the Kevin Stevens of the Redsox - benching him in the
last game at Fenway?
|
88.2852 | JUST REMEMBER!!!!!!!!!!1 | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 16 1996 16:58 | 15 |
|
PROSPECT.
1. Something expected or foreseen; possibility
2. Chances for success
3. A potential customer or purchaser.
4. The direction in which something faces
HTH'S
CHAPPY
|
88.2854 | | WONDER::REILLY | Sean / Alpha Servers DTN:223-4375 | Tue Apr 16 1996 17:10 | 18 |
|
> Billthe is right. If the Sox keep going the way they are,
> Duquette will find out what Big Tuna is finding out - that
> the lustre of a big rep is inadquate protection against
> the slings and arrows of a bloodthirsty press.
Hey, don't leave out us fans! I and others have been slagging
Bill since he got here (and so far, we've been right to).
I don't care so much about the Sox, so I can look on this with
out much emotion, but it does look similar to the Pats' situation,
except Bill has show much more arrogance to fans - every decision
Bill has made the fans have called for a year ago. 4 years into
his rebuilding program, the Pats are still flailing under Mr.
2 Super Bowl Ring. He deserves what he gets.
- Sean
|
88.2855 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 16 1996 17:10 | 30 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2851 by AKOCOA::BREEN "You never can tell" >>>
> George your revisionist history of the brave might pass in some
> quarters but I had a friend who had followed the braves literally since
> they played in Boston, continuously. In 1991 with Belliard playing
> shortstop, Pendleton at third and Nixon in center they finally had the
> defense upon which their pitching COULD develop.
I see your friend has forgotten how Deion Sanders platooned with Nixon in
centerfield. Also I think that if he were to add up the games played by Blauser
and Lemke he'd find out that Belliard wasn't quite the fixture at short that he
seems to remember. And Sid Breem may have been a great defensive player once
but I don't remember him winning many golden gloves in Atlanta.
As for pitching confidence, early on Smoltz and Glavine were talking to a
sports psychologist but they were far more concerned about why one seemed to be
giving up runs early and the other had a habit of giving up runs the inning
after his team had scored.
The point is that the Braves team around 1990 was far from perfect because
they were a team building for the future. Since then they have had two waves
of players come out of the minors, the 1st with players like Lemke and Justice
the 2nd with players like Chipper Jones and Javy Lopez and now Greenville
seems to have it going again.
Now the Sox are in the same position, trying to build from the bottom up. It
takes time. Certainly more than the 2 weeks the Boston Sports press is willing
to allow.
George
|
88.2856 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 11:04 | 46 |
| The Sox lost another one to Baltimore. Once again, no offense as they were
only able to come up with one run.
The Baltimore middle infield of Roberto Alomar and Cal Ripken looked really
fantastic. They made some dramatic plays around 2nd base.
Here's a comparison of Red Sox hitting the 1st 2 weeks of this year v. last.
For each batter this years stats are followed by last year's stats. Rc is Runs
Created, RCG is Runs Created per Game. Runs Created is cumulative but if you
look at the drops in things like Runs Created per game and average you can see
the problem. Every hitter in the lineup is off last year's pace.
Name Rc Rcg gms avr Ab Ht Hr Tb Sb BB So
RF Troy O'Leary 4.789 5.173 10 0.286 35 10 1 14 0 3 3
69.307 6.707 112 0.308 399 123 10 196 5 29 64
SS John Valentin 2.043 1.532 11 0.167 42 7 0 8 2 5 4
111.772 8.156 135 0.298 520 155 27 277 20 81 67
1B Mo Vaughn 5.313 4.347 11 0.250 44 11 1 17 0 4 11
120.039 8.332 140 0.300 550 165 39 316 11 68 150
DH Jose Canseco 6.584 5.228 11 0.233 43 10 3 22 0 6 13
83.072 8.156 102 0.306 396 121 24 220 4 42 93
LF Mike Greenwell 5.816 4.619 11 0.277 47 13 1 19 0 2 6
76.773 6.043 120 0.297 481 143 15 221 9 38 35
3B Tim Naehring 4.813 6.188 10 0.276 29 8 2 14 0 3 1
78.682 7.035 126 0.307 433 133 10 194 0 77 66
C Mike Stanley 1.375 1.280 10 0.121 33 4 0 5 0 7 6
68.753 6.336 118 0.268 399 107 18 192 1 57 106
2B Wil Cordero 1.636 1.227 11 0.143 42 6 0 9 0 2 4
71.569 5.195 131 0.286 514 147 10 216 9 36 88
CF Dwayne Hosey 3.784 5.108 9 0.269 26 7 0 9 3 5 5
18.932 11.359 24 0.338 68 23 3 42 6 8 16
Today Sele goes for the Red Sox.
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2857 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed Apr 17 1996 11:22 | 11 |
| Their defense stunk.
I couldn't help but wonder, as I watched the highlights, what Dwayne Hoser was
thinking of when he called Greenwell off that ball.
Was he thinking "Oh-oh, I can't let Cornholio get it?" Or was he thinking
"Here's my chance for a big diving catch"? Or was he NOT thinking.
Daryll's and my favorite player had a good bead on that ball, and I KNOW that
after Hoser blew it, Cornholio asked him "Are you threatening me???"
|
88.2858 | Bery bery ugly... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Wed Apr 17 1996 11:31 | 21 |
|
> I couldn't help but wonder, as I watched the highlights, what Dwayne Hoser was
> thinking of when he called Greenwell off that ball.
>
> Was he thinking "Oh-oh, I can't let Cornholio get it?" Or was he thinking
> "Here's my chance for a big diving catch"? Or was he NOT thinking.
Greenwell wasn't wearing the hood last night, I don't think. That may
have had something to do with it (I love Greenie's irreverent, macho
posturing and strutting after he _does_ manage to make a play, btw, like
on that sliding catch earlier in the game-- Mikey self-proclaims such as
"leadership by example"). Sadly, that wasn't much more than a routine
fly ball to left-center. Robbie Alomar must have thought it was
Christmas out there.
Over the weekend even the Sox' housemen radio announcers were
sarcastically teasing Greenwell. "I'll bet Mike has never been more
aerodynamic, Joe", etc.-- Jerry Trupiano.
glenn
|
88.2859 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 11:37 | 10 |
| Yes the defense is off but that doesn't account for the bulk of the problem.
Hosey looked good on several plays while I was watching, he's just not that
bad.
Take another look at the offensive stats. The Red Sox only scored 1 run.
Their offense isn't half what it was last year. I don't care how well the
defense might have played they still would have lost that game and most of
the others they've lost this year.
George
|
88.2860 | An all-around disaster so far... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Wed Apr 17 1996 11:48 | 15 |
|
> Take another look at the offensive stats. The Red Sox only scored 1 run.
> Their offense isn't half what it was last year. I don't care how well the
> defense might have played they still would have lost that game and most of
> the others they've lost this year.
Absolutely. It's almost (I said almost) a consolation that if the
defense improves a bit, and the offense comes around as expected,
knowing that the poor defense has really not cost the Sox more than
1-2 games. Not many of these debacles have even been close (Sox were
generally clueless over what to do with David Wells last night, for
example).
glenn
|
88.2861 | Hosey bye, bye | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Wed Apr 17 1996 11:54 | 6 |
| Hosey is that bad and looks that bad. I can't believe he'll be on the
roster by May and no one will pick him up. Having him out of there
will be the first major step.
I have some lingering hope that by 97 or '98 Cordero may hit
mediocrity.
|
88.2862 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 12:06 | 9 |
| Why do you feel based on just 2 weeks that Cordero won't hit the way he did
last year?
Claiming someone won't hit based on the 1st two weeks of a season sounds
an awfully lot like the typical Red Sox fan short sightedness on which the
Boston Sports press feeds. Do you have other evidence that his change in
hitting is more than just a slump?
George
|
88.2863 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Wed Apr 17 1996 12:36 | 19 |
| I said six months ago that Cordero would have an adjustment period. I
am willing to have patience with his hitting. If they had left Alicea
starting at second they would have had plenty of opportunities to play
Cordero at various infield positions, including spotting him at second.
George, are use saying you go along with on the job training at second
base? That you can have a pitching staff with a second baseman that
can't turn a double play?
Not only am I basically confident that Cordero will hit I'm still
optimistic that they will turn around. The Sox are very streaky and
hitter's weather will do wonders. The best thing about these Sox is
that I really feel that the raw pitching is there including Wakefield
who should be fine.
Right now I'd sit Cordero or dh him, waive Hosey and let him play at
Pawtucket if possible. Put Cuyler in center and O'Leary in right and
the best defensive second baseman in the organization at that spot
until the pitching regains its confidence in the fielders.
|
88.2864 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 12:48 | 19 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2863 by AKOCOA::BREEN "You never can tell" >>>
> George, are use saying you go along with on the job training at second
> base? That you can have a pitching staff with a second baseman that
> can't turn a double play?
Yes, considering that the Red Sox are in the process of rebuilding I don't
see any problem with giving Cordero time to come around at 2nd base.
> Right now I'd sit Cordero or dh him, waive Hosey and let him play at
> Pawtucket if possible. Put Cuyler in center and O'Leary in right and
> the best defensive second baseman in the organization at that spot
> until the pitching regains its confidence in the fielders.
But the main problem is lack of hitting. Pitching is ok, defense is rough but
just doesn't cost that many games but the hitting is non-existant. Why go with
weaker hitters and more defense when that's not the main problem?
George
|
88.2865 | guess I've missed something | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Wed Apr 17 1996 13:01 | 3 |
|
Pitching is OK???
|
88.2866 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 13:28 | 9 |
| There seem to be specific reasons for the pitching problems. Gordon was
sick one time, he was having problems gripping the ball in the rain another,
Wakefield is an experiment that should be ending soon, Suppan seems to be
getting ready to take his place, Clemens has an ERA around 3.0, I think Sele
will come around.
I don't think Pitching will be a big problem.
George
|
88.2867 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Wed Apr 17 1996 13:35 | 4 |
|
Defense won't cost many games?????
|
88.2868 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 13:46 | 3 |
| Not as many as no hitting.
George
|
88.2869 | | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Wed Apr 17 1996 14:38 | 6 |
| yeah but the lack of hitting is just covering up the fact that defense like
that will cost them games. Right now you guys are saying that the defense maybe
cost them one or two games but if they had been hitting as expected then the
defense would have cost them 6 or 7 games imo.........
mike
|
88.2870 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 14:52 | 7 |
| No think about what you are saying.
They are 2-11. If they were playing well they would be about 8-5 or 9-4.
If defense was costing them 6 or 7 games it would account for the entire
difference and hitting would count for nothing.
George
|
88.2871 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Wed Apr 17 1996 15:03 | 14 |
| You can't seperate the pitching and the defense. The inability to
execute is hamstinging the team. I'm saying they need stability at the
key positions. They still would have Vaughn,Valentin,Greenwell,Jose
and O'Leary for offense.
The question came up on EEI: "Where would the Sox be with Devon White
in centerfield?". My answer: With White and Alicea back at second no
worse than .500 and probably 7-6,8-5.
Duquette bring in Cordero reminds me of when John Y. Brown thought he'd
made Auerbach's day with the Kermit Washington for McAdoo deal. Maybe
Cordero will get hot with the bat and he can be unloaded to Colorado
like McAdoo was to Detroit. Who was the braindead GM - wasn't dick
vitale involved there?
|
88.2873 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed Apr 17 1996 15:05 | 3 |
|
I think what he is saying is he wants the BNB Stats?
|
88.2874 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 15:11 | 6 |
|
But I know better than to hold my breath.
George
|
88.2875 | 7 in a row, look at them go! | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Thanks UMass for a great season! | Thu Apr 18 1996 10:04 | 3 |
| How'd the Sox lose it? My paper says "Sox tied in 7th".
NAZZ
|
88.2876 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Apr 18 1996 10:09 | 4 |
|
Bases loaded in the 12th. BJ Surhoff hits the wall in left for a
long single. BALLGAME!!
|
88.2877 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Thu Apr 18 1996 10:12 | 9 |
| After the Bruins game I took to watching the banner under Headline News.
I see 5-5 T10, B10, T11.... I go to bed figuring these boobs have a chance.
Not on yer life....
Worst start in the history of the franchise.
|
88.2878 | Only one regular-season game, but a microcosm... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Apr 18 1996 10:27 | 42 |
|
Well, I for one do not think it too early to say that Red Sox
fans can only realistically concentrate on the wildcard race
at this point. When an "on-paper talent" team like the Orioles
gets off to the kind of great start they have, they almost
always win it (Red Sox teams of the past representing most of
the exception cases).
The good news is that I still see the Yankees as the #1 wildcard
possibility (toss in the remainder from Seattle/California), and
the Sox are still "only" 5 games back of the somewhat-struggling
Yanks.
> How'd the Sox lose it? My paper says "Sox tied in 7th".
Painfully. Actually a very entertaining game, but another one
of those (like last Sunday) where it hurts to lose. Sox had a
chance to go ahead in the 11th or 12th with Valentin at third,
one out, but had the misfortune of hitting the ball right at
Roberto "God Plays in the Pivot" Alomar with the contact play on;
Valentin couldn't make a decision which way to go (was dead either
way), got nailed back at third.
Then, in the 12th, the O's loaded the bases off Mike "No Relation to
Greg" Maddux with nobody out, looked like they might wiggle free
after Ripken put up a bonehead at-bat where he swung at ball 4
(in a situation where he could not really be _overly_ patient),
but Surhoff drilled one off the ball with the OF pulled in, 6-5
O's...
For all the talk of both the poor offense and poor defense, the guys
most responsible for the losses in the _close_ games so far have been
that stellar middle-relief crew of Maddux, Belinda, and Stanton. Get
a lead, blow it immediately by giving up the dinger. Stanton put that
pitch on a damned tee for Alomar in the 7th (although Greenwell should
have been in position and caught it).
Small consolation, but KK managed a great game, btw (at least I thought
so; he was on top of every move I was thinking of...)
glenn
|
88.2879 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Thu Apr 18 1996 10:29 | 5 |
| > Small consolation, but KK managed a great game, btw (at least I thought
> so; he was on top of every move I was thinking of...)
"Well, we lost, but at least we were well managed and our uniforms looked
good..."
|
88.2880 | Not huge on Kennedy, but overall I like him... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Apr 18 1996 10:34 | 13 |
|
>> Small consolation, but KK managed a great game, btw (at least I thought
>> so; he was on top of every move I was thinking of...)
>
> "Well, we lost, but at least we were well managed and our uniforms looked
> good..."
I concur completely, but since we're already hearing these ridiculous
murmurings of firing the guy, "Kennedy on the hotseat", blah, blah,
blah, I just thought I'd throw in my unsolicited commentary... ;-)
glenn
|
88.2881 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Apr 18 1996 10:45 | 4 |
|
BTW Mike and Greg are brothers.
|
88.2882 | Absolutely no resemblance... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Apr 18 1996 11:03 | 8 |
|
> BTW Mike and Greg are brothers.
I was speaking baseballically, not familially...
glenn
|
88.2883 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Apr 18 1996 11:36 | 30 |
| I wish I could say I've never seen so much over reaction to 9% of a season
but I've been living in and around Boston far too long to have been spared from
this type of panic.
It's way too early for any of this to mean anything. When you add in the fact
that many players are responding in strange ways to the cold weather that makes
these first few weeks even less representative of how the rest of the season is
likely to go.
Right now the Red Sox are 6 games away from a winning record and 3 of the 4
teams they've played are among the toughest in the American League. With the
hitting they've got they could run off a 6 game winning streak any time.
It's only mid April for gosh sakes and the way people are talking not only
are the Red Sox eliminated from the playoffs, they are eliminated from the
American League, Major League baseball, Boston, Planet Earth and the Universe
itself.
Take a deep breath, we have the entire summer ahead of us. Remember Yogi's
words about it being over then think about the Miracle Braves of 1914. They
entered July dead last in the National League, started winning, and not only
won the Pennant but they went on to sweep 4 from Connie Mack's Athletics in the
World Series.
Go back in doors, take in a hockey game or maybe watch the Bulls for a while.
When you come back outside the sun will be shining, the grand stands will be
warm, the Red Sox will be winning and all will be right with the world.
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2885 | I'm not upset, panicked, or anything else but realistic | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Apr 18 1996 11:49 | 21 |
|
> It's only mid April for gosh sakes and the way people are talking not only
> are the Red Sox eliminated from the playoffs, they are eliminated from the
> American League, Major League baseball, Boston, Planet Earth and the Universe
> itself.
Spare us your smarminess, George. The Sox are already 9-1/2 games
behind a very talented ballclub. Even if there were 200 games to
go, you can't spot a team like that 10 games, at any time in the
season, and think it's insignificant. I based my assessment not
on emotion, but from a rational, mathematical, probabilistic
viewpoint.
Realistically, it's time to start thinking wildcard. I don't care
how many games back of .500 the Sox are; that's an even more modest
goal than the wildcard, and the Orioles are sizing up to be a .600
ballclub, easy. Want to run the numbers for me on what'll it'll
take for the Sox to beat out a .600 division winner?
glenn
|
88.2886 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Apr 18 1996 12:02 | 26 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2885 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Pride of Steel" >>>
> Realistically, it's time to start thinking wildcard.
Realistically it's premature to be thinking Wild Card. Dan Duquette's style
seems to be to build an organization from the farm teams up. Last year the Sox
were a 4th place team that walked on water and got into the playoffs. This year
they are up to a 2nd-3rd place team that's in a slump.
What's important is that AA Trenton is in 1st place in the Southern Division
of the Eastern League with a 7-4 record. That's where I hope to see Dan
Duquette's hand really starting to work. The Major League smoke screen was fun
last year and it will be fun when they start wining later this year but it
doesn't matter where they finish this season.
For once we've got a GM who is looking to the future. If things work out the
Red Sox will have the best minor league organization in the American League in
a couple years just as the Expos did in the National League when Duquette left
there. Then they will be in position to build a power house for the turn of the
century.
And if they make some sparks in the mean time? Great. They did last year
maybe they will again this year but if not the real rebuilding process should
get us there soon enough.
George
|
88.2887 | How much Duquette manure can you eat? | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Thanks UMass for a great season! | Thu Apr 18 1996 12:28 | 8 |
| I am really sick of this beatification of Dan Duquette. The next
person in ::SPROTS who says "The Sox finally have a GM who's building
for the future" will be flogged at the next OPP gathering. Is Kevin
Mitchell the future? Was Frankie Rodriguez the future? Duquette may
have a plan for the future, but if you believe that the future is gonna
be any better than the present, you ar a hopeless Red Sox fan.
NAZZ
|
88.2888 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Apr 18 1996 12:35 | 6 |
|
The sox finally have a GM who's building for the future, for the
future of the Phillies,The Twins,etc....
|
88.2889 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Apr 18 1996 12:41 | 18 |
|
I guess I'm a hopeless Red Sox fan, then, 'cause I do expect the
Sox to improve over the next few years.
BTW - as much as some people here might hate to admit it, the
Red Sox are getting close to the point where, historically, even
a wild card birth might be out of range. Bill James did a study
(after the Tiger's 18-2, and then 35-5 start in 1984) comparing
the statistic likelihood of various starts to the historical
significance of those same starts.
The bad news (for the Sox) is that the point at which a "start"
becomes a "likely indicator of success" is about 12-13 games. If
you start 11-2, it's very unlikely you're really a sub-.450 team;
conversely, if you start 2-11, it's very unlikely you're really
a better than .550 team.
Joe
|
88.2891 | Are they THAT bad? We'll see | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Thu Apr 18 1996 12:53 | 12 |
| Didn't Cincinatti start off 0-10 last year? George since the entire
set is 162, a sample size of 15 is pretty good for about 5-7% incidence
of failure in pure mathematics terms. I could look this up.
The skewing factor would be the weather and the difficulty of the teams
and where they played them, eg @Texas,KC; Cleveland.
I stand on my specific criticisms but feel that there is a fair chance
we'll see the sox in some kind of race - the Yankees don't seem to be
worldbeaters under the Geoge and JoeT regime. It's actually better
that this disaster occurred early unless of course it indicates that
the team itself is THAT bad.
|
88.2892 | This ain't ML Carr, Nazz... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Apr 18 1996 12:54 | 30 |
|
> -< How much Duquette manure can you eat? >-
>
> Duquette may
> have a plan for the future, but if you believe that the future is gonna
> be any better than the present, you ar a hopeless Red Sox fan.
Baseball America's 1996 farm system ratings:
1) Los Angeles Dodgers
2) New York Mets
3) Atlanta Braves
4) BOSTON RED SOX
5) Florida Marlins
Vanguard Baseball's 1996 Top 100 prospects by club:
1) Atlanta Braves
1) Colorado Rockies
3) BOSTON RED SOX
3) Cleveland Indians
Apparently it's also the national media that's selling the manure.
If anything, I'd say it's the Boston media that's not buying it
(Dan Shaughnessy et al have not a clue, not a one).
glenn
|
88.2893 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Apr 18 1996 12:55 | 23 |
| Teams have hot years and play above their level and they have cold years and
play below their level. Last year the Red Sox were a 4th place team on paper
then went out and walked on water to win the division. A true Cinderella team.
This year they are a little better but they've started out cold. Maybe it will
continue, maybe not, it doesn't really matter.
The point is that baseball organizations consist of one Major League Club,
one each of AAA and AA and a fist full of A ball and rookie squads. Major
League Clubs that win are those who work at all levels to build a winning
organization and building one of those organizations takes several years.
If you would rather have a Sullivan type owner who goes out and buys a few
hot players to make a run at the division every few years when attendance
starts to fall off while ignoring the rest of the organization then fine but
I'd rather see someone like Duquette who has a track record of building a
complete organization, not just a Major League facade.
As for the typical BoSox getting "sick and tired" of hearing about building
for the future, big deal. The typical BoSox fan is born sick and tired and is
always griping about something. Wallow in cynicism if you desire, I like what
Dan Duquette is doing with this organization. It's about time.
George
|
88.2894 | Let's rehire Lou -not | CSLALL::BRULE | Springtime at last | Thu Apr 18 1996 13:01 | 12 |
| Go ahead and Flog NAZZ but accoring to Baseball America the Sox have
the fourth highest Farm System in MLB and 3 years ago it was #27. If
the Sox don't get Aggie last year it would have been ugly. And what did
Kevin Mitchell cost? His contract says he has to play to earn big
bucks. They have no contracts longer then 2 or 3 years. Please let me
know if the talent level is not 2 or 3 times better now then when he
took over. He's made mistakes (keeping Greenwell and the stupid Canseco
contract). Frankie Rodriguez hasn't proven a thing yet but that could
change. The deal for Cordero where they gave up 2 prospects plus
Cormier, Cordero is one year older then McGiure and 2 years older then
Bennet. If you think that the future won't be better then the present
your a typical whiney New Englander.
|
88.2895 | Didn't they have one of the best farm systems in 772-73 too? | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Apr 18 1996 13:05 | 15 |
| Tsk Tsk Tsk
PROSPECT.
1. Something expected or foreseen; possibility
2. Chances for success
3. A potential customer or purchaser.
4. The direction in which something faces
HTH'S
CHAPPY
|
88.2896 | | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Thu Apr 18 1996 13:07 | 4 |
| The Soxs' pitching absolutely sucks. Anything above 500 for the year will be an
accomplishment imo. I don't know enough about the farm system to know if they
have any real prospects at the pitching posistion but if they don't I don't see
the future being any better than the present.
|
88.2897 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Springtime at last | Thu Apr 18 1996 13:22 | 6 |
| Pitching is one of the Red Sox farms strengths. Guys like Jeff Suppen,
Rafael Orrelano, Brian Rose, Matt Murry etc should start arriving in
the next few years. They have some top SS-2B prospects in Garciaparra,
Donnie Sadler and another one who I cann't think of now.
Mike
|
88.2898 | What's yer point, Chap? Oh yeah, there isn't one | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Apr 18 1996 14:17 | 9 |
|
> PROSPECT.
See Steinbrenner, ruination thereof. Reference McGee, McGriff,
Belcher, Drabek, Buhner, Hitchcock.
glenn
|
88.2900 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Springtime at last | Thu Apr 18 1996 14:29 | 1 |
| Get a life Paul
|
88.2901 | Get used to it. | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Apr 18 1996 14:46 | 5 |
|
Point is keep dreaming. Destiny just won't let your team win
anything EVER!
|
88.2902 | You win with pitching, and with superstars | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Thanks UMass for a great season! | Thu Apr 18 1996 15:17 | 25 |
| Suppan got creamed last night, btw - 3 1/3 IP 8H 5R 5ER.
The bottom line is that Duquette has no clue, no plan, no idea at all.
His infatuation with Darryl Strawberry, his signing Mitchell, Trading
for Whiten and Chamberlain last year all point to the same thing - he
likes home runs, and will do anything he can to get another big bat.
He obviously hasn't learned from 75 years of Red Sox history, that you
win with pitching, and the more pitching you have, the better you are.
And I'm NOT talking about signing every Tom, Dick, and Harry that
threw more than 50 innings of major league ball, and hoping a few of
them turn out to be OK. Jamie Moyer is not the answer. Mike Stanton
is not the answer. Even Tim Wakefield is not the answer.
As in every sport, you win with quality, not quantity. You can talk
all you want about the depth of the Braves staff, but Maddux, Glavine,a
nd Smoltz are why they are winners. In basketball, Shaw and Panny
turned Orlando from chumps to contenders, and Michael's return has
turned Chicago back from a .500 team to a likely champion. Duquette's
scheme of signing every warm body he can find and not signing the best
fewew agents available (such as Robby ALomar - how much better woould
the Sox be with him???) is a format that encourages mediocrity and long
term failure. Last year he was lucky - mediocrity was good enough to
win his watered-down division. But last year was an abnormality.
NAZZ
|
88.2903 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Apr 18 1996 16:12 | 29 |
| Twelve losses out of 162 games times 5 years and all the BoSox "experts" know
more about the game than Dan Duquette. Ask yourself this question, how many top
knotch minor league organizations have you built? How many has Duquette built?
Who knows more about what they are doing, you or Duquette?
Like most basketball fans you are making the mistake of thinking that this
team on the field is the team Duquette is trying to build. It's not. It's an
intrim team around which he will build the real one.
The typical Red Sox fan doesn't have a clue that building a champion in major
league baseball involves putting together a multi team multi layer organization
from A ball and rookie leagues on up to the majors. The team you are looking at
now has little to do with the final goal.
Listen to Harrington. They are not going to build the new park until 2002.
Why then and not now? Easy, that's when they are planning on having a winning
team so that's when they want to build the park and sell the ball club for a
top price.
Think for a minute. Except for a hand full of players, this is the same
team that was winning last year. Of course back then Duquette was a genius
for pulling together this team, now he's an idiot for putting the same guys
on the field because he didn't anticipate that they would be hitting half
what they were hitting last year in the only games that count, the games in
the 1st month of the season.
Red Sox fans, you've got to love'em.
George
|
88.2904 | | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Thu Apr 18 1996 16:33 | 5 |
|
So if the Soxs don't win it all in 2002 could we consider it a choke job or a
collaspe??????????
;^)
|
88.2905 | No one, not even Duquette, thinks Jamie Moyer's the answer | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Thu Apr 18 1996 16:42 | 15 |
|
> He obviously hasn't learned from 75 years of Red Sox history, that you
> win with pitching, and the more pitching you have, the better you are.
Duquette obviously realizes this. Jeff Suppan, Brian Rose, Andy Yount,
Robinson Checo. All recent Red Sox' drafts have concentrated on
pitching. The rest of the cheap, low-dollar acquisitions you cite have
been designed to (hopefully) win a few ballgames and keep the wolves
at bay.
We'll be talking again in a couple years, Nazz. Like I said, Duquette
has been on the job exactly two seasons.
glenn
|
88.2906 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Thu Apr 18 1996 17:01 | 11 |
| George you are as usual skating past the point. He has taken one
strong point, second base and devestated it. He has taken a weak
point, centerfield and made it weaker.
I don't recall any of the criticism about his ability as a farm
director. He has unquestionably exhibited a lack of baseball sense at
the major league level regarding fundemental baseball, immature is what
I'd call it.
Actually most of us would like to think that Duquette knows more than
we do. You don't mind if he shows us first do you?
|
88.2907 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Thu Apr 18 1996 17:09 | 8 |
|
Somebody asked for it, so:
97-65 0.599
SOX are currently 2-12, they would need to go 95-53 .642
Marc
|
88.2909 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Thu Apr 18 1996 17:59 | 13 |
|
Sure, the Red Sox are rebuilding, and I like that and am looking
forward to the future. Meanwhile, they have a team that last year was
sub-par defensively, and they made it worse defensively.
George, this is not the same team as last year.....
And if they win 6 games, they'll be 8-12, thats .333, not .500, they
are 10 games from a .500 record. The season is young, but they are
playing bad baseball and why does it make us such "typical" Red Sox
fans for recognizing it?
Dave
|
88.2910 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Thu Apr 18 1996 18:50 | 10 |
|
Since everyone is in a nick-picking mood...
>And if they win 6 games, they'll be 8-12, thats .333, not .500, they
>are 10 games from a .500 record.
8/20 = .400 not .333
Marc (living for a better math world)
|
88.2911 | great seats huh buddy? | SUBPAC::SKALSKI | | Thu Apr 18 1996 19:11 | 10 |
|
The sox can sip all year, this means more good seats for me
and my kid. I could care less, fair weather fans go away.
Shark
|
88.2912 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri Apr 19 1996 09:01 | 15 |
| | -< What's yer point, Chap? Oh yeah, there isn't one >-
|
|
|> PROSPECT.
|
| See Steinbrenner, ruination thereof. Reference McGee, McGriff,
| Belcher, Drabek, Buhner, Hitchcock.
Uh, Glenn, I think Chap was being generic and objective.
'Saw
|
88.2913 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri Apr 19 1996 09:02 | 10 |
| | -< Get used to it. >-
|
|
|
|
| Point is keep dreaming. Destiny just won't let your team win
| anything EVER!
Uh, Glenn, Chappy is being subjective again.....
|
88.2914 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Apr 19 1996 10:03 | 13 |
| Ok so here's the question. Does Dan Duquette have a clue or not?
Most people I believe accept the idea that the Sox were in tough shape
when Duquette took over. If Duquette does not have a clue, why did the Red
Sox do so well last year? Remember, Duquette was the one who hired Alicea to
play 2nd base.
Are we to believe that last year they won the division in spite of Duquette
but these 12 losses in 15 games in early April prove that Duquette didn't have
a clue all along?
That makes no sense.
George
|
88.2915 | Pitching takes time, serious time... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Fri Apr 19 1996 10:41 | 20 |
|
> We'll be talking again in a couple years, Nazz. Like I said, Duquette
> has been on the job exactly two seasons.
On second thought, considering the ages and experience of the plethora
of pitchers the Sox have drafted in the past three years, it may be
more like 3-4 years before we see very good results. By which time,
yes, Dan Duquette could be burned to a crispy crisp by those looking
for immediate results from makeshift and interim deals. The #1 concern
will have to be John Harrington's patience. So far, so good, but
you never know what might happen if the gold stops flowing on Yawkey
Way.
Alas, Roger Clemens may also be premium trade bait come August. He's
still really the only guy who could draw serious interest in trade
for top-notch prospects (of those whom you can afford to move--
Vaughn, Valentin, even the reviled Cordero are still cornerstones).
glenn
|
88.2916 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Fri Apr 19 1996 11:05 | 13 |
|
I don't think George was talking about the next 6 games, he was
talking about if they won 6 of the 12 that they lost. They would have
been 8-6 instead of 2-12. Even if they only won 3 of the 12 that they
lost they would have been 5-9, and nobody would have been panicking.
I'm not jumping off the bandwagon or panicking yet. They should
just worry about getting back to .500, then worry about where they
are in the standings. My only concern with them being 3-12, is that
they can't continue and end up 6-24 and fall ~15 games behind. I
would really like to see them go 10-5 in there next 15 games, getting
them to 13-17 after 30 games.
Ron
|
88.2917 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Apr 19 1996 11:35 | 8 |
| In addition to Clemens, I'd also consider offering up Greenwell and
Valentin (should Garciaparra come into his own this year in Pawtucket)
as trade bait come August. For once, the Sox could be the team
dangling the goods instead of overpaying for someone of that caliber.
Keep in mind, this all hedges on them being totally out of the playoff
hunt by then (one could say they're already at that point). :-)
Steve
|
88.2918 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Fri Apr 19 1996 11:43 | 16 |
|
> In addition to Clemens, I'd also consider offering up Greenwell and
> Valentin (should Garciaparra come into his own this year in Pawtucket)
> as trade bait come August.
I'd gladly give up Greenwell, but realistically he's not worth
anything (face-saving mid-level prospect at most). I don't want to
touch Valentin. I don't think either Garciaparra or Sadler will
ever come close to him as a hitter, and JV can easily play 2B
for years. Sadler might end up in CF; the biggest part of his game
right now is the 75 SB potential. The guy is a burner, with true
baserunning instincts (I know Nazz doesn't like hearing all this
discouraging talk of speed and defense ;-).
glenn
|
88.2919 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri Apr 19 1996 12:20 | 2 |
| Garciaparra sounds like something you light up after a good meal, not something
that plays middle infield....
|
88.2920 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Fri Apr 19 1996 12:20 | 13 |
| Let me point out that my specific criticisms of Duquette do not mean
he's a bum but he's not perfect. One thing he's done is change the
RedSox from multiple organizations into one organization run by him
alone. This is what will avoid a Bagwell situation where faint praise
was treated as damnation.
What is apparently the biggest Duquette weakness is the inability to
personally size up talent. This can be a strength if the people he
relies on can communicate and judge. Think of the opposite a Don
Zimmer who felt they knew everything they'd ever need to know about a
ballplayer at one glimpse.
But one glimpse of Hosey in centerfield should be enough for anyone.
|
88.2921 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Apr 19 1996 12:27 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2920 by AKOCOA::BREEN "You never can tell" >>>
> What is apparently the biggest Duquette weakness is the inability to
> personally size up talent.
Then who put together last year's American League Eastern Division Champs?
How did he do that without the ability to size up talent?
> But one glimpse of Hosey in centerfield should be enough for anyone.
One glimpse of the AL East Championship banner should be enough for anyone.
George
|
88.2922 | At least he's not "raving"... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Pride of Steel | Fri Apr 19 1996 12:28 | 9 |
|
> Let me point out that my specific criticisms of Duquette do not mean
> he's a bum but he's not perfect.
"I somewhat agree that we have to be patient a while longer but so
far 'total incompetent' seems to be the apt label."
-- Bill The Drill Breen
|
88.2923 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Fri Apr 19 1996 13:08 | 14 |
|
>> Listen to Harrington. They are not going to build the new park
>> until 2002. Why then and not now? Easy, that's when they are
>> planning on having a winning team so that's when they want to
>> build the park and sell the ball club for a top price.
Dead wrong. The Sox are surely planning on having a winning
team long before the year 2002. At least I damn well hope so.
The date for being in a new park has absolutely nothing to do
with any plans for having a winning team and more to do with
the logistics of getting the damn thing built. They haven't got
a site yet. They haven't greased any politicians yet. They don't
have a design. Given that it took 30 years to build the new
Garden, the year 2002 for a new Fenway looks overly optimistic.
|
88.2924 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Apr 19 1996 13:23 | 8 |
| Glenn, the reason I brought up Valentin is that he'll probably be
commanding serious money at season's end. I would expect he'll be
looking for 4-5 million should he end the season even close to last
year's production. You'd have about 15 million tied up between him
Vaughn and Canseco. Believe me, I love the guy, but he's also the one
that would bring the most in a trade, if signed.
Steve
|
88.2925 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Apr 19 1996 13:27 | 13 |
| If they are building the organization from A ball up and if the 1st wave of
talent is still in A ball right now, 2002 is not far off.
The strategy for that 1st wave might go something like
1997 AA Trenton.
1998 AAA Pawtucket.
1999 Rookie years, wowed by "The Show".
2000 Sophomore slumps, real major leaguers got'em figured out.
2001 Surround them with free agents, talent starts coming through. Playoffs.
2002 Try to win.
George
|
88.2926 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Fri Apr 19 1996 14:48 | 7 |
| "total incompetent" was the label Lou Gorman wore and worse for an
awful lot less. It's Duquette's farm abilities and last years pennant
which begs patience.
With the hope that springs eternal in each Sox fan's breast I wish the
team the best and my feeling is that they will rebound. 2-12 will
bring out some harsh feelings, though.
|
88.2927 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Apr 19 1996 14:53 | 10 |
| I would think that Duquette's farm abilities and last years pennant gives
hope and confidence that he knows what he's doing long term.
What I find hard to understand is why a 3-12 (they won yesterday) record
would cause anyone to think the GM didn't know what he was doing considering
that he won the division year before and that the very nature of baseball is
such that both winning and losing streaks are common for good teams and bad
teams alike.
George
|
88.2928 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Mon Apr 22 1996 09:37 | 21 |
| Interesting weekend for the boys from Beantown.
The one bright spot is that new infielder (Selby?).
Watched the game yesterday, saw him hit his homer and then flipped over to
hockey. I really had a hockey jones this weekend.
I flipped over with the Sox ahead 5-2, figuring they had a good chance.
All I could do when I saw the final score later in the evening was laugh.
3-15.
The weather is warm, and I keep waiting cause I know that they're going to turn
it around and win the division real soon now. I know cause a little birdie
names Pollyana told me so.
'Saw
|
88.2929 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Apr 22 1996 09:53 | 8 |
|
From 1965-1984, teams which started 3-12 (6 of them) had an aggregate
winning percentage of .425. There were only two teams with worse
starts.
The next data point is 20 games total.
Joe
|
88.2930 | Patience | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Apr 22 1996 09:58 | 29 |
| >Garciaparra sounds like something you light up after a good meal, not something
>that plays middle infield....
According to everything I've read, the Red Sox fully expect him to be their
starting shortstop in 1997. His first name, by the way, is Nomar. His father,
whose name is Ramon, wanted to name his son after himself, but he already had
a son named Ramon.
I don't think the Red Sox' rebuilding will take until 2002. What Duquette has
done in his two years is provide a foundation that will support a perennial
contender, by enabling it to move new blood into the big league team as its
regulars age or become too expensive. I suspect contention is a realistic
prospect for as soon as 1999, perhaps even 1998, depending on how fast the
kids mature.
I wonder if the team's surprising showing last year didn't put a bit of a
monkey wrench into the machinery, forcing Duquette to find a short term
solution at closer. Otherwise, I thought his performance was masterful,
putting pieces into place to win a division title without doing too much
damage to the long term plan.
I think George is right that this year is essentially being punted. Over
the long haul, the middle infield will be Garciaparra and Valentin (though
I hear he is resisting the move to 2B), so why spend money on Alicea? And
if the Cordero gamble pays off, Valentin becomes expendible, and can be
moved for more prospects while saving salary. From my perspective, Dan
Duquette is doing an outstanding job in Boston.
Steve
|
88.2931 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 09:59 | 8 |
| There you go, something for the Red Sox to shot for, having the best record
after a 3-12 start.
Meanwhile, the Red Sox's AA Trenton farm team is clipping along at 11-4.
The outlook for the future looks good.
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2932 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:09 | 4 |
|
You guys make me sick.
|
88.2933 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:09 | 9 |
| >According to everything I've read, the Red Sox fully expect him to be their
>starting shortstop in 1997. His first name, by the way, is Nomar. His father,
>whose name is Ramon, wanted to name his son after himself, but he already had
>a son named Ramon.
Actually, this is a misconception. His first name is (I believe) Anthony,
but he uses Nomar (Ramon backwards) as a nickname to honor his dad.
I know this is fact because I read it someplace... :-) :-) :-)
|
88.2934 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:25 | 9 |
|
How many years does Greenwell have left on his contract? I look
for Cordero to take over in Left field when Greenie is gone. In 1998
the team will have Cordero, Sadler, and Nixon in the outfield. With
Valentin a 3B, Nomar at SS, ? at 2B, and Mo at 1st.
At the rate the Sox are playing, they could be there at the end of
this year.
Ron
|
88.2935 | Whatever happened to Trot Nixon - the other CF of the future? | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Thanks UMass for a great season! | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:33 | 9 |
| I find it humorous that several of you are already assuming Donnie
Sadler will be the starting centerfielder shortly for the Sox. This is
amusing not only because most of you wouldn't know Donnie Sadler from
Sgt. Barry Sadler and because Sadler has never played a minute of
centerfield in his baseball career. But the new plan apparently has
him as the centerfielder of the future.
NAZZ
|
88.2936 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:39 | 12 |
| > amusing not only because most of you wouldn't know Donnie Sadler from
> Sgt. Barry Sadler and because Sadler has never played a minute of
Uh, you might know the difference.
Sadly, Sgt Barry Sadler died several years ago. I'm assuming Donnie Sadler is
alive and breathing (although you might doubt that about a lot of the current
Red Sox).....
'saw
|
88.2937 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:39 | 9 |
| I believe they are talking about Donnie Sadler as a short term solution. At
this point the BoSox are probably playing games with the press and tossing
Sadler to the wolves as a distraction.
Trot Nixon, the real centerfield prospect, needs more time to develop. As of
last week Sadler was hitting .333 in Trenton where as Nixon is only hitting
.222. Bringing Nixon up at this point would make little sense.
George
|
88.2938 | | GLRMAI::FINIZIO | | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:51 | 4 |
|
Hasn't Nixon been the next coming of Willie Mays for 5 years now?
|
88.2939 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:55 | 7 |
|
Thats what I keep hearing. Than again Frankie Rodriguez was
the next Cy Young. Until he gets traded now he sucks I hear???
Chap
|
88.2940 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 11:12 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 88.2938 by GLRMAI::FINIZIO >>>
> Hasn't Nixon been the next coming of Willie Mays for 5 years now?
No, I've never heard that type of claim. No one is saying that this guy is in
the same class as Derrek Jeter or Andruw Jones but he should be a solid every
day player.
He was the Red Sox #1 pick a few years ago and has been moving up the
system at a steady pace. I believe he spent a couple years in A ball and
now he's at the AA level which is the normal pace for a good prospect.
George
|
88.2941 | :-0 | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Apr 22 1996 11:27 | 6 |
|
I think we are missing something. With all this Hoopla about the
1999 World Series Champion Boston Red Sox. People are forgetting the
fact that Mike Greenwell had another outfield assist on Friday night.
This guy is on some kind of record pace or something. Isn't he?
|
88.2942 | I like DD's thinking-- made the CF move very day I mentioned it | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon Apr 22 1996 11:44 | 21 |
|
> I find it humorous that several of you are already assuming Donnie
> Sadler will be the starting centerfielder shortly for the Sox. This is
> amusing not only because most of you wouldn't know Donnie Sadler from
> Sgt. Barry Sadler and because Sadler has never played a minute of
> centerfield in his baseball career.
But we know more about him than you do, Nazz. Come on, admit it.
If this were basketball and we were talking about some UMass high
school recruit, it'd be a completely different story. ;-)
I do know enough about Donnie Sadler to say that he _will_ be a
major league player. How good, and at what position, I don't know.
But he's not the type who will wash out completely. I'll bank my
reputation on it. ;-) Reason? Because he's only 5'6", takes
pitches, and has blazing speed (has surprising power, too). Those
kind of players don't rely as much on in-development skills. The
"skill" is there.
glenn
|
88.2943 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Apr 22 1996 11:52 | 19 |
|
> I believe they are talking about Donnie Sadler as a short term solution. At
>this point the BoSox are probably playing games with the press and tossing
>Sadler to the wolves as a distraction.
OK, explain this one to me...
Sadler's _younger_ than Nixon, and perhaps a better prospect - BA
thinks so. Why throw your #1 prospect to the wolves to distract them
from "the real centerfield prospect".
Personally, I believe that _Sadler's_ the real CF prospect; a
February issue of BA noted "Sadler eventually may move from SS to
2B or CF, not because of any deficiencies but because John Valentin
and Nomar Garciaparra loom ahead." About Nixon, they note his
"strong right-field arm". Sadler's speed should serve him well in
CF, while Nixon's arm will best be utilized in RF.
Joe
|
88.2944 | Nazz and George collaborate on disinformation campaign... ;-) | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon Apr 22 1996 11:58 | 18 |
|
> Personally, I believe that _Sadler's_ the real CF prospect; a
> February issue of BA noted "Sadler eventually may move from SS to
> 2B or CF, not because of any deficiencies but because John Valentin
> and Nomar Garciaparra loom ahead." About Nixon, they note his
> "strong right-field arm". Sadler's speed should serve him well in
> CF, while Nixon's arm will best be utilized in RF.
Absolutely. (Trot) Nixon's not a defensive CF. He's too big, and
not exceptionally fast. Sadler has been playing SS, and playing it
well, so at least he's obviously got the arm to play a good CF.
Like I said, Sadler _will_ make the Sox by 1998, barring devastating
injury. Nixon is more questionable, but if his back problems are
done with and he starts hitting, this could be a much-anticipated
rookie tandem in '98 (or late '97).
glenn
|
88.2945 | I'd suspected Glenn and DD were in contact | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Mon Apr 22 1996 12:04 | 12 |
| So Joe what you are saying is that Glenn plagiarized BA in making the
Sadler to centerfield observation to me last week that left me so
impressed when it came out over the weekend - I even thought he might
have had a personal call from DD tipping him off.
I hope it is possible that the great Dan Duquette can stand a little
criticism on his trip to the world series with the Sox. What I like
best about him right now is that he quickly admitted his mistakes with
Cordero and Hosey and his overall downplaying of the importance of team
defense. This future emphasis on the importance of making plays in the
field and it being an absolute cornerstone to any championship dreams
is worth the 3-15 (and counting -)) start.
|
88.2946 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 12:09 | 20 |
|
RE <<< Note 88.2943 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
> Sadler's _younger_ than Nixon, and perhaps a better prospect - BA
> thinks so. Why throw your #1 prospect to the wolves to distract them
> from "the real centerfield prospect".
Maybe because they feel he can handle the wolves.
There's a lot of debate on whether kids who show talent should be hurried
along to the pros or allowed to develop with guys at their own level. Pete
Gammons had an article in the Globe blaming failures of todays pitchers on
the tendency to hurry them along.
Who knows which theory is correct? Maybe it varies from kid to kid and they
feel Sadler can handle the jump while Nixon can not. One thing for certain,
right now Sadler is hitting better than Nixon so it makes more sense to give
him a shot.
George
|
88.2947 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Mon Apr 22 1996 12:14 | 10 |
|
The only reason I mentioned Sadler in CF, is because the Sox have
pulled him from AA Trenton and sent him to Florida and extended spring
training for 2 weeks. In extended spring training he is learning how
to play CF. As someone said he is playing SS, but has Valentin and
Garciaparra ahead of him.
If someone on the current Sox team doesn't step up and play a
decent CF. Sadler might be given a chance in 2 weeks.
Ron
|
88.2948 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Apr 22 1996 12:42 | 38 |
|
> There's a lot of debate on whether kids who show talent should be hurried
>along to the pros or allowed to develop with guys at their own level. Pete
>Gammons had an article in the Globe blaming failures of todays pitchers on
>the tendency to hurry them along.
Sorry to digress here, but...
1) Bill James has done a number of studies, and players _aren't_
being rushed to any greater an extent than they were previously.
2) Gammons' column was, frankly, a bunch of hooey. He blames
teams for rushing pitchers, and then within the same section
calls attention to the good young pitchers of old - Clemens and
Gooden and someone else whose name escapes me. How was it
right to rush these guys but wrong to rush (say) Wilson?
3) Gammons advocates drafting high school pitchers; James also has
done a study of high school vs. college draft picks, and college
draft picks have returned _significantly_ more value per draft
choice invested.
My opinions:
If a young player succeeds at one level, he should gain promotion
to the next level on a yearly basis.
If a young player excels at one level, he should gain promotion as
soon as the organization's convinced it's not a small sample size
issue.
Young _pitchers_ should require a greater sample size than young
hitters.
But no one is being rushed to any great extent. A bigger threat to
young pitching today is Dallas Green...
Joe
|
88.2949 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Mon Apr 22 1996 13:22 | 17 |
|
I think Roger Clemens and Doc Gooden are to good examples. Roger
went to college and was 22 years old when he joined the Red Sox. I
don't believe Gooden went to college and joined the Mets at the age
of 19. If Gooden went to college or spent time in the minors, would
he have matured more, and avoided his drug related problems? Nobody
can answer that.
The last 18/19 year old I know of who has a very good success in
the Majors is Ken Griffey Jr. Griffey is a rare exception, his father
played in the Majors and Jr. was around those surroundings his entire
life. So he knew what to except and what was expected of him at a
young age.
I believe the best course of action for any player is to spend 4
years in college or 4 years in the minors working your way up, from
A, AA, AAA.
Ron
|
88.2950 | | PSDVAX::ROBICHAUD | Don'tTakeComedyFromStrangers | Mon Apr 22 1996 14:02 | 10 |
| Typical Red Sox, they have problems with Hosey in centerfield and
decide to take a shortstop prospect and make him into an outfielder.
It's the Frankie Rodriquez fiasco all over again. And speaking of
Garciaparra according to folks I talked to at Pawtuckett this weekend
the PawSox are not playing him and using Juan Bell at shortstop
instead. I would hope that if he can't play at AAA level the Slobs
would be smart enough to send him to Trenton or wherever, so that he
can play and not sit the bench.
/Don
|
88.2953 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 14:31 | 13 |
| Re<<< Note 88.2951 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI "SPORTS 1995 NOTY & RED_SOX Most Knowledgeable Noter Award!" >>>
> Who the heck is Derrek Jeter?
You can always tell a Rotisserie Stat man who sits up late at night and
looking through blurie eyes finally figures out that the reason the stats
didn't get recorded for a particular player and the reason he went through to
the available list was that the frig'en name was spelled wrong on the roster.
When you get done with that one Paul, how about Ruben Riveria. He doesn't
exist either as our Stat man found out the hard way.
George
|
88.2954 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Mon Apr 22 1996 14:47 | 8 |
| re .2950,
Garciaparra was injured at the beginning of the season, when he
came back he played only 3 games and got hurt again. If Nomar didn't
re-injure himself he would have been called up instead of Selby.
Ron
|
88.2955 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Apr 22 1996 14:49 | 35 |
|
RE: .2949
The thing is, Gammons argument was that college pitchers should
throw 60 games in the minors, high school pitchers 80-100, and that
there are no good young pitchers around like there were 10 years
ago.
The "good young pitchers" of 10 years ago presented were Clemens
and Gooden, _neither_ of whom threw anywhere near as many minor
league games as Gammons recommended.
> The last 18/19 year old I know of who has a very good success in
> the Majors is Ken Griffey Jr. Griffey is a rare exception, his father
> played in the Majors and Jr. was around those surroundings his entire
> life. So he knew what to except and what was expected of him at a
> young age.
Historically there are very few 18 year olds who are talent-wise
ready for the majors (Alex Rodriguez is the most recent case). But
why hold them back for four years? What would you have thought had
Yount been held up for four years playing in leagues he was dominating,
and therefore didn't get 3,000 hits?
> I believe the best course of action for any player is to spend 4
> years in college or 4 years in the minors working your way up, from
> A, AA, AAA.
1) That puts players in the majors at age 22. _Most_ players aren't
ready at age 22.
2) That punishes 18, 19, 20, and 21 year olds who are ready for the
majors.
Joe
|
88.2956 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 15:01 | 8 |
| Gammons was also saying something about how back in 1971 there were over
20 pitchers with over 270 innings per year and the last pitcher to throw
that many innings was Clemens back in 1991.
Of course that may have as much to do with the increased use of set up men
as it does with the quality of starting pitchers.
George
|
88.2957 | A real question | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Thanks UMass for a great season! | Mon Apr 22 1996 15:15 | 7 |
| Selby looked good yesterday - is he a legit prospect or another Ted
Cox?
As far as my knowledge of minor league prospects go, you're right
Glenn. I do know high school basketball prospects better!
NAZZ
|
88.2958 | The next Denny Doyle... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon Apr 22 1996 15:25 | 12 |
|
> Selby looked good yesterday - is he a legit prospect or another Ted
> Cox?
Pretty much a non-prospect... but I think a better player than the
general total lack of any regard from the Baseball Americas, etc.
would suggest. Not a bad hitter, and I'm thinking he plays a better
2B than Cordero by just showing up (to be fair, he has experience
there, Cordero doesn't).
glenn
|
88.2959 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Apr 22 1996 15:49 | 20 |
|
> Gammons was also saying something about how back in 1971 there were over
>20 pitchers with over 270 innings per year and the last pitcher to throw
>that many innings was Clemens back in 1991.
>
> Of course that may have as much to do with the increased use of set up men
>as it does with the quality of starting pitchers.
No, what it _really_ has something to do with is four vs. five man
rotations.
In a four man rotation, you get ~40 starts, and so must average
less than seven innings a start to pitch 270 innings.
In a five man rotation, you get ~32 starts, and so must average
nearly eight and a half innings a start to pitch 270 innings.
Gammons was _particuarly_ out to lunch with that column...
Joe
|
88.2963 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 23 1996 08:34 | 3 |
|
I'll give ya 1 cent.
|
88.2965 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Tue Apr 23 1996 09:35 | 5 |
| throw in a Gronowski on softball video!!!!!
That was too easy 8*)
Jimbo
|
88.2967 | the price is rising!!!! | BIGQ::WEST | Kevin 225-4528 HLO | Tue Apr 23 1996 10:41 | 7 |
|
I'll give you .02 for it if you and jimbo sign it......
then I'll give it to Karen when she takes me out to
lunch at the end of the year.......Go Yanks..../westy
|
88.2969 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Tue Apr 23 1996 11:48 | 5 |
| the gopher ball special lists at $1.99.
I picked up two Gronowski on softball video's for a penny
Jimbo
|
88.2970 | Suppan and Sele very similar in makeup, temperament, looks... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:00 | 8 |
|
Jeff Suppan pitched a one-hit shutout for Pawtucket last night, 11 Ks.
That's two great outings, one poor one. Suppan's not long for AAA,
though (will displace either Wakefield or Moyer, one or the other),
and at age 21 he should only get better.
glenn
|
88.2971 | Red Sox on a roll with swiss cheess | BIGQ::WEST | Kevin 225-4528 HLO | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:07 | 9 |
|
Karen, a meal is a meal, I'll bring the happy meal toy home to my
daughter......if you want to give up after the All-Star game you can
just let me know.......most Red Sox fans already gave up.....**^)
/Westy
|
88.2972 | Suppan was masterful lst night\ | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Thanks UMass for a great season! | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:25 | 6 |
| Glad you mentioned Suppan, Glenn. Sox are doing the right thing by
letting him start at Pawtucket, rather than keep him here as a middle
relief guy. Nice to see how he bounced back after that bad start
lasted week. Is he a control guy or a power pitcher?
NAZZ
|
88.2973 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:34 | 13 |
|
> Glad you mentioned Suppan, Glenn. Sox are doing the right thing by
> letting him start at Pawtucket, rather than keep him here as a middle
> relief guy. Nice to see how he bounced back after that bad start
Interesting - I take it you don't subscribe to Earl Weaver's thoery
that young pitchers should start out in the bullpen?
> lasted week. Is he a control guy or a power pitcher?
Control, but he gets his share of strikeouts...
Joe
|
88.2974 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:35 | 17 |
|
> Glad you mentioned Suppan, Glenn. Sox are doing the right thing by
> letting him start at Pawtucket, rather than keep him here as a middle
> relief guy. Nice to see how he bounced back after that bad start
> lasted week. Is he a control guy or a power pitcher?
On the spectrum, control more than power, like Sele (maybe throws
a little harder than Sele, and without the big over-the-top yakker).
Supposedly can bring it to 90 mph, though, which is all a pitcher
really needs if his fastball moves and he's got control and
command of his other pitches. The most encouraging thing about
Suppan's minor-league performance to date is that performance
relative to age (21) and experience (only two full years of pro
ball).
glenn
|
88.2975 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:41 | 12 |
|
Re- Suppan.
Great news. Maybe the Sox can get back into the race. I hear Jeff
Montgomery really likes KC. So when Slocumb continues to give up hits
maybe Duquette can trade Suppan to the Royals for Montgomery for the
stretch run.
Sounds like a plan!!
|
88.2977 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Tue Apr 23 1996 13:42 | 5 |
| I'll have to check on the title, it might have been 1 of each.
A slow pitch hitting video, one step up from the feared T-ball
video put out in the early 70's. 8*)
Jimbo
|
88.2978 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Tue Apr 23 1996 14:44 | 9 |
|
As bad as the Sox have played they are only 7.5 games out of
1st place. The AL East could end up like the AL West of a couple of
years ago, Everybody under .500 going into September. The defense
has committed only 2 errors the last 5 games, accounting for 0 un-earned
runs, so the defense has gone from awful to mediocre. Now if the
pitchers will just throw strikes and the hitting picks up.
Ron
|
88.2979 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 23 1996 14:47 | 6 |
|
Re- everyone under .500 going into September.
Don't bet the farm on it!!!
|
88.2980 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 15:28 | 13 |
| No, the Yankees are for real. No one's going to win this division with a sub
.500 record.
Baltimore has had a few rough days. They got pounded by the Rangers over the
weekend giving up 26 runs in one game. In that inning Davy Johnson let a couple
pitchers get pounded for 6-7 runs each then brought in an infielder to face
Kevin Elster who pounded a grand slam home run.
But that was one game. The O's are also for real and should give the Yankees
a good chase. With some luck the Red Sox will get their act together and join
that scramble. At least I hope so.
George
|
88.2981 | "We're turning the corner"-- Kevin Kennedy | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Apr 23 1996 17:45 | 10 |
|
Sox loose, 8-6. Sox blow 3 separate leads, 2 the work of the blowpen.
See Moyer, Hudson stink. See Moyer give up three dingers. Run, Twins,
run. See Moyer demoted.
Hudson's work with 1-run lead in 7th: walk, double, massive HR to center.
glenn
|
88.2982 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 10:01 | 8 |
| Veteran Alex Cole who was called up from Pawtucket is off to a good start.
Not exactly a star in the outfield but it appears his broken leg that kept him
out most of last season has healed and he's hitting and running once again.
On the silver lining side, for the 1st time this season the Sox went into
a town to play a series and didn't lose. They finished 1-1 against the Twins.
George
|
88.2983 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed Apr 24 1996 10:26 | 21 |
|
"We're turning the corner"
Yep, we was turnin' the corner in the Tampax Maxi-Pads Trojan-Ribbd Red Sox
Chevrolet when the back end got jus' a leetle loose on us. She kinda starting
swingin' out and next thang you know I was correctin' with the wheel, you know,
like they taught me in the Richard Petty Red Neck 'Baccy Spittin' Foxworthy Fan
NASCAR Wannabe Drivin' School when WHAM, I got smacked into by some rookie
driver, who spun me around and left me headed for the wall.
The Tampax Maxi-Pads Trojan-Ribbed Red Sox Chevrolet hit the wall, flipped over
and caught on fire....
That's okay. Next week, we're gonna make it all the way to the SECOND turn!
Kevin Kennedy
|
88.2984 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Wed Apr 24 1996 10:50 | 6 |
|
Alex Cole and somebody else who is still in Pawtucket, has a
clause in there contract. That they have to be brought up, by May
15th or they have the option of becoming a free agent.
Ron
|
88.2985 | VERY impressive Suppan numbers as of Wednesday | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Apr 26 1996 11:29 | 3 |
| W L ERA G SV IP H R ER BB SO
Suppan, Jeff .... 2 0 2.55 3 0 17.2 9 5 5 2 21
|
88.2986 | One of few pseudo-stats that means anything... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Fri Apr 26 1996 12:58 | 13 |
|
> W L ERA G SV IP H R ER BB SO
> Suppan, Jeff .... 2 0 2.55 3 0 17.2 9 5 5 2 21
^^^^^
^^^^^
Ratio alert!
glenn
|
88.2987 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Apr 26 1996 13:28 | 10 |
| Meanwhile, the Red Sox have their 1st winning streak going for the year.
Wakefield has had two good starts.
Mo Vaughn is starting to pound the ball.
The temporary set back is behind us.
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2988 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Fri Apr 26 1996 13:34 | 4 |
|
Parade in October.
|
88.2989 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Apr 26 1996 13:37 | 5 |
|
Hey, you take what you get.
GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.2991 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Apr 26 1996 15:30 | 8 |
|
Where?
I'm the only one that seems to be excited and I'm not a bandwagon fan.
What do you think it will take to get the bandwagon types started?
George
|
88.2993 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Apr 26 1996 15:49 | 6 |
| Well you use to claim to be both a Browns and an Indians fan, which was it?
Or do you claim to be a fan of every team, and when the team rises to the
top, you publicizes it?
George
|
88.2994 | It's still a winning streak | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Thanks UMass for a great season! | Fri Apr 26 1996 16:26 | 3 |
| Let's not get too excited - it's only two in a row, isn't it?
NAZZ
|
88.2995 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Fri Apr 26 1996 16:40 | 7 |
|
I was pretty excited, simply because I was at Wednesday's game and it
was one of the best games I've seen at Fenway in years. The Sox fought
back after being down 7-0, it was an impressive victory, given their
horrible play so far. They have won 3 of their last 4.
Dave
|
88.2996 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Fri Apr 26 1996 16:46 | 9 |
| re .2994,
As usual Paul has his facts wrong. :^), the Sox have only won
2 in a row. Paul is trying to give them a KOD.
Tonights game determines who is the worst team in the league,
both teams are 6-16. KC took 2 of 3 earlier in the season, with the
Sox blowing leads in the 8th and 9th on April 5th and 6th.
Ron
|
88.2998 | When did this law come out??? | FABSIX::J_PAGE | | Fri Apr 26 1996 18:54 | 5 |
|
Why can't someone root for any team they want, regardless of
geographical location???
john
|
88.3000 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A Deity in Dreadlocks | Mon Apr 29 1996 07:12 | 4 |
| Is this crap *still* going on??
CHARLEY
|
88.3001 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 29 1996 10:21 | 11 |
| Often times when teams good on paper are struggling, the manager is the 1st
casualty. What do you think, will Kevin Kennedy be running this team for long?
If not who will and when?
Snow's finally gone and the plows are put away, I wonder what Joe Morgan (the
former BoSox manager) is doing these days?
Latest word from the Silver Lining department, both AAA Pawtucket and AA
Trenton are in 1st place in their respective divisions.
George
|
88.3002 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Mon Apr 29 1996 10:48 | 8 |
|
I think KK should be fired because this team hasn't been playing
good fundamental baseball all season long. This team left Spring
training un-prepared to play the regular season, which put them in
a hole. Now that they are in a hole, the are pressing and struggling
to make something happen.
Ron
|
88.3003 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Mon Apr 29 1996 12:52 | 14 |
| Given that Kennedy asked for a raise based on the team's performance
last year under 'his influence', perhaps he should be giving some of
that money back.
Does anyone know if, in Kennedy's opinion, he considers the team
improved over last year? If it is, the results clearly aren't showing
it. We essentially traded Alicea for Cordero, Aguillera for Slocumb,
MacFarlane for Stanley, Gordon for Hanson, and some second rate center
fielders for other second rate center fielders.
The bats are starting to come around a bit, but the mental lapses and
general defensive efforts [which includes the pitching] are pathetic.
Right now, the Sox definitely deserve the worst record in baseball.
|
88.3004 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 29 1996 13:17 | 18 |
| I'm going to go way out on a limb and guess that Kennedy won't be giving back
his money. :*)}
Not only that but he traded several healthy players for the same guys
unhealthy and he traded several players who were performing well for the same
guys who are not performing well today.
But least you yearn for years gone by, take a gander at Eric Hanson's record
as of last Monday:
TOR BlueJay Pitchers W L G GS CG GF SH SV IP H R ER HR BB SO
Erik Hanson 2 3 5 5 0 0 0 0 25.0 35 0 24 6 15 15
That's an ERA of 8.640.
Zane Smith was doing better but he just went on the DL.
George
|
88.3005 | Pitching is horrible-- that ain't KK | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon Apr 29 1996 15:33 | 24 |
|
> I think KK should be fired because this team hasn't been playing
> good fundamental baseball all season long.
Breen and I went at this pretty good at lunchtime today, but I'm
insisting that the Sox' biggest problem so far is horrible pitching
(while he's still hanging in there with the defense). My claim is
regardless of the below-average fundamentals and defense (it was
mediocre last year, too), the pitchers aren't throwing strikes, and
thus are giving up BBs and dingers at an alarming rate. I can't
blame that on the manager; not when the very same guys have gotten
it done in the past, even for Kennedy. Kennedy was absolutely
correct when he publicly stated that some of the pitchers have
told him by their timid approach that they don't want the ball; he
all but called them "gutless" and that's the accurate description at
this point.
So far, imo the only pitcher who has demonstrated _any_ guts so far
is Roger Clemens, and of course he's 0-4 to show for it, in spite of
working like a horse out there, putting in his usual 120+ pitches a
start, damned the (putrid) middle relief.
glenn
|
88.3006 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Mon Apr 29 1996 16:26 | 9 |
|
RE: Clemons 0-4
Speaking of which. Could someone explain this one to me. Roger lets
*2* runs score. The relief pitcher has *2* ERs credited to him. The
final score was 5-4. How in world does Clemons get the loss?
Marc
|
88.3007 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 29 1996 16:35 | 21 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3006 by CSC32::MACGREGOR "Colorado: the TRUE mid-west" >>>
> Speaking of which. Could someone explain this one to me. Roger lets
> *2* runs score. The relief pitcher has *2* ERs credited to him. The
> final score was 5-4. How in world does Clemons get the loss?
I don't know what order they scored in this game but this sort of thing
is possible. Say the following happened.
Clemens gave up 2 runs and left with the score 2-0.
A relief pitcher came in and gave up 3 more runs, 2 which were earned. The
score is now 5-0, Clemens is still pitcher of record.
The Sox come back and score 4 runs, the score is now 5-4 and Clemens is still
pitcher of record.
The game ends, Clemens gets the loss because since he left the team behind
they were never tied or ahead.
George
|
88.3008 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Mon Apr 29 1996 17:40 | 10 |
|
Hmm. I would have thought that the moment the opponent has scored more
runs than the pitcher of record allowed, that the pitcher of record
would then change to the current pitcher.
I wonder what kind of logic they decided on to allow this not to be the
case.
Marc
|
88.3009 | "They" being George and Harry Wright, Boston's most famous celebs | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon Apr 29 1996 17:50 | 14 |
|
> I wonder what kind of logic they decided on to allow this not to be the
> case.
If you "put" your team in the hole, and the team never crawls out of
the hole, you get the "L", no matter how unjust. Some have made the
argument that W's and L's should be more subjective, at the discretion
of the official scorer, where the pitcher most responsible for gaining
the win gets the "W", and the same for the loss, but as for "they"
deciding on the logic, that occurred about hunnert years ago, and it
has not changed since.
glenn
|
88.3010 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Tue Apr 30 1996 10:00 | 8 |
|
Your team has to tie the score or go ahead while a relief pitcher
is pitching or the starting pitcher gets the "L". Its simple, everybody
knows the rule, takes discretion of the official scorer out of the
pitcher (no pun intended). That way a home team official can't improve
the stats of his pitchers, which could effect Cy Young award balloting.
Ron
|
88.3011 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 01 1996 10:04 | 13 |
| Well the bats came alive. That's one way to win a ball game. If you score 13
runs in a game you can afford defensive and pitching problems. Maybe tonight
the Rocket can get his 1st win.
Good news continues in the minors. AAA Pawtucket and AA Trenton continue to
hold on to 1st in their divisions. High Single A Sarasota is struggling but Low
Single A Michigan is in 2nd in the Midwest league.
The short season A ball team hasn't started yet and there is no report on
Combined or Rookie leagues in USA Today's WWW site but the middle levels of
the Red Sox organization seem to be doing OK.
George
|
88.3012 | | AFW3::ROBICHAUD | Don'tTakeComedyFromStrangers | Mon May 06 1996 15:24 | 4 |
| Got mail from Denny saying he heard that Daddy Butch Hobson was
arrested in Pawtuckett for possession of cocaine.
/Don
|
88.3013 | Hobson=cocaine | BIGQ::WEST | Kevin 225-4528 HLO | Mon May 06 1996 16:01 | 7 |
|
Heard the same thing, had a 8-ball.......says he has a habit
big habit........see what the Red Sox led him too......
/westy
|
88.3014 | What's an 8-ball? | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Mon May 06 1996 16:11 | 3 |
| for us uneducated common folks? Is that alot?
mike
|
88.3015 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Mon May 06 1996 16:58 | 6 |
|
So if you sink the 8-ball you win right??? Unless of course you sink
it too early and the other guy catches you doing it...
Marc
|
88.3016 | depends on which side of the mirror you're on... | MKOTS3::tcc051.mko.dec.com::CORRIGAN | | Mon May 06 1996 18:19 | 6 |
|
re .14
not alot if you likes to do cocaine.....alot if you get pulled over
by the pow-leece.....1/8 of an ounce..
|
88.3017 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Mon May 06 1996 23:44 | 2 |
|
Rumor has it he was picking up the snow for Mo and friends.
|
88.3018 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Tue May 07 1996 06:50 | 4 |
|
I don't think so......Isn't da Butcher in the Cleveland system now?
|
88.3019 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 08:04 | 4 |
|
No. Guess Albert Belle isn't the only "bad" apple in baseball...
You got Mo getting in a bar fight, you got Butch in trouble with
drugs...
|
88.3020 | | PHHSS1::DFAUST | Bad Things, man... | Tue May 07 1996 08:19 | 5 |
| Hobson is (was?) the manager of the Scranton/Wilkes Barre Red Barons
(say that three times fast!). He is currently on a leave of absence,
with Ramon Aviles (a member of the 1980 WS champ Phils) taking his
place.
|
88.3021 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 07 1996 09:28 | 19 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3019 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> No. Guess Albert Belle isn't the only "bad" apple in baseball...
> You got Mo getting in a bar fight, you got Butch in trouble with
> drugs...
Mo was defending his lady. As for Butch, he's only a bad apple to the extent
that the government has the right to decide what apples are good and what
apples are bad. Albert was caught cheating at baseball by corking his bat and
tends to be abusive to reporters who themselves are about the most abusive
people on the planet. There are no reports about him being abusive to anyone
else.
I don't know, to me the cheating at baseball part is the only thing that rubs
me the wrong way and that seems to have been handled by a suspension. Seems
all these problems would go away if we didn't have so many stink'en rules and
if reporters and fans left the players alone once they left the field.
George
|
88.3022 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 09:59 | 4 |
|
Albert was defending his property during the Halloween altercation but
that didn't seem to matter to the press... so the excuse that Mo
was defending his lady doesn't hold water either.
|
88.3023 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 07 1996 10:03 | 5 |
|
Have we finally come to the point where the press decides who is guilty and
who is innocent, who is right and who is wrong?
George
|
88.3024 | In plain view of non-media personages, did Albert heave... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue May 07 1996 10:55 | 10 |
|
> No. Guess Albert Belle isn't the only "bad" apple in baseball...
> You got Mo getting in a bar fight, you got Butch in trouble with
> drugs...
Keg party at my house, Joey... ;-)
glenn
|
88.3025 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 12:15 | 9 |
|
I guess Glenn was in Cleveland when the incident with the fan occurred.
Apparently he has first hand information that proves Belle's guilt,
because we all know that he was acquitted of all charges.
I guess this is what Sox fans stoop too when their team sucks for 70+
years... maybe in 10-20 years you guys can talk about the Sox
potentially winning a World Series or something... not this year
though.
|
88.3026 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 07 1996 12:21 | 9 |
| ... except that the Sox haven't sucked for 70+ years. They sucked through the
20's, 30's and into the mid 40's and they sucked during the late 50's and early
60's but they were pretty good in the late 40's and have been pretty good
with a few short exceptions since the mid 60's.
Now the Indians, except for the last few years and some years in the late
40's, they have really sucked wind.
George
|
88.3027 | "Class" can't be rented, only bought... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue May 07 1996 12:23 | 18 |
|
> I guess Glenn was in Cleveland when the incident with the fan occurred.
No, I just saw the (obviously misinterpre-tat-ed) television pictures...
> I guess this is what Sox fans stoop too when their team sucks for 70+
> years...
> Rumor has it he was picking up the snow for Mo and friends.
The above speaks for itself. In Cleveland, the "logical" thought
processes Indians' fans used earlier this year was to relentlessly
boo MVP and Man of the Year Mo Vaughn, as if it were somehow _his_
fault that sportswriters recognized Joey's legendary boorish
behavior...
glenn
|
88.3028 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue May 07 1996 12:42 | 23 |
|
> Now the Indians, except for the last few years and some years in the late
>40's, they have really sucked wind.
C'mon, George, you know something about baseball history; you should
know that the above statement is false.
The Indians were regularly a contender from their founding through
1959. While at no point were they clearly the best team for any
extended time, they were clearly the second best team in the AL
in the 50s.
From 1960-1993, the Indians stunk. At most times they weren't the
worst team in baseball, but at no point were they close to being one
of the best teams.
In _spite_ of 33 years on ineptitude, the Indians record at the end
of 1993 (i.e., before their recent exploits) stood at 7269-7104, a
full season above .500, and the fourth best record among the original
AL teams. The third best is the Sox; the Indians are on course to
pass them this year, I believe.
Joe
|
88.3029 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 07 1996 13:40 | 9 |
| Yes I know, I was just trying to keep with the style of the note to which
I was responding.
The point is it's a reach to say that the Red Sox have sucked for 70 years
when in fact they've had some really good runs during the late 40's and from
the mid 60's on including several occasions in which they have won their league
championship.
George
|
88.3030 | But what have you done for me lately? | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue May 07 1996 13:46 | 7 |
|
The Indians finished behind the Sux for 25 consecutive seasons,
1967-1991, believed to be an alltime record in any sport, any
league, any country... ;-)
glenn
|
88.3031 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 13:57 | 14 |
|
Talk about a major league hypocrite!
> The above speaks for itself. In Cleveland, the "logical" thought
> processes Indians' fans used earlier this year was to relentlessly
> boo MVP and Man of the Year Mo Vaughn, as if it were somehow _his_
> fault that sportswriters recognized Joey's legendary boorish
> behavior...
Boston fans booed Belle in Boston this year *BEFORE* Cleveland fans
booed Vaughn in Cleveland.
|
88.3032 | 'nuff said, team sucks, fans sucks... they deserve each other! | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 13:57 | 3 |
|
I must have missed something... have the Sox won a world championship
since 1918?
|
88.3033 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue May 07 1996 14:01 | 8 |
| | -< 'nuff said, team sucks, fans sucks... they deserve each other! >-
|
|
| I must have missed something... have the Sox won a world championship
| since 1918?
|
So what's the point?
|
88.3034 | Halloween party at my house, Joey... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue May 07 1996 14:04 | 15 |
|
>> The above speaks for itself. In Cleveland, the "logical" thought
>> processes Indians' fans used earlier this year was to relentlessly
>> boo MVP and Man of the Year Mo Vaughn, as if it were somehow _his_
>> fault that sportswriters recognized Joey's legendary boorish
>> behavior...
>
> Boston fans booed Belle in Boston this year *BEFORE* Cleveland fans
> booed Vaughn in Cleveland.
Belle has had good reason to be booed, by most of the world's breathing
population...
glenn
|
88.3035 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 07 1996 14:06 | 21 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3032 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> I must have missed something... have the Sox won a world championship
> since 1918?
They won their league championship several times. So what if they haven't
won the World Series?
Where is it written that the only team that has a successful year is the
team that wins the World Series? At least they've won their league championship
a number of times. Would you say that the NBA league champion or the NFL league
champion was not successful if they didn't beat the winner of any other
leagues that happened to be around?
How many times have the 49'ers beaten the winner of the Canadian League?
Never. Does that mean that they were not successful?
And by the way, in baseball it's "Nuf Ced", not "'nuff said". Especially
around Boston.
George
|
88.3036 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 14:08 | 2 |
|
Frank, this is SPROTS, there is no need for a point.
|
88.3037 | sox suck, 'nuff said | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 14:10 | 7 |
|
Vaughn had good reason to be booed, by most of the world's breathing
population... he drank and got into a fight at a bar for no good
reason.
Boston, the home of bad chowder, bad drivers, bad sports teams and
hypocrites.
|
88.3038 | 'nuff said | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 14:10 | 2 |
|
Bottom line, what's the Sox record?
|
88.3039 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 14:11 | 3 |
|
I forgot one... Boston home of the coke-heads... Bias, Lewis, Hobson,
I'm sure there are many more...
|
88.3040 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 07 1996 14:18 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3038 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> Bottom line, what's the Sox record?
I think Joe just listed it and it's better than the Indian's record
> -< 'nuff said >-
That's Nuf Ced, not 'nuff said.
George
|
88.3041 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Tue May 07 1996 14:29 | 4 |
| > Boston, the home of bad chowder, bad drivers, bad sports teams and
> hypocrites.
Enough is enough. The chowder here is great!
|
88.3042 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Tue May 07 1996 14:29 | 4 |
| > I forgot one... Boston home of the coke-heads... Bias, Lewis, Hobson,
> I'm sure there are many more...
Careful, Groaner, or we'll sic Donna Harris-Lewis on you...
|
88.3043 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 07 1996 14:32 | 7 |
|
Really.
If someone told you here's a bowl of white mushy stuff from Lake Erie would
you eat it?
George
|
88.3044 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue May 07 1996 14:40 | 3 |
|
George is all set, he doesn't care how the Sox do... he'll just jump on
some other bandwagon *WHEN* necessary - see prior history.
|
88.3045 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue May 07 1996 14:43 | 26 |
|
Does anyone have the final standings for 1994?
The latest I have shows the Sox 54-59 (missing a game or two), the
Tribe 66-47 (complete).
Last year, unless I'm remembering it incorrectly, the Sox went
84-60, the Tribe 100-44.
This year, today, the Sox are
Which makes the overall records:
Sox: 7469-7182 - .510
Tribe: 7455-7205 - .509
To pass the Red Sox in wins, the Tribe will need 15-17 more victories
over the remainder of the year.
To pass the Red Sox in winning percentage, they'll need a few more
than that.
Either one looks achievable...
Joe
|
88.3046 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue May 07 1996 15:21 | 4 |
|
Yeah George I'd be real Happy if My team just gets to the dance
some of the time. NOT
|
88.3047 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 07 1996 15:31 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3044 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> George is all set, he doesn't care how the Sox do... he'll just jump on
> some other bandwagon *WHEN* necessary - see prior history.
Paul you are contradicting your self now.
1 In this thread you seem to be saying that the only thing that matters is
winning the World Series.
2 A while ago when you yourself reported that I had picked the name "Red
Caps" for my BNBAL team a few years back you said it was because they
won the Pennant.
- So if 1 is correct, me picking the "Red Caps (Braves)" a few years back
means I'm not a bandwagon Braves fan but a real Braves fan.
- If 2 is correct then it's a victory to win your pennant even if you don't
win the World Series.
Nuf Ced,
George
|
88.3048 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Tue May 07 1996 17:53 | 7 |
|
>> How many times have the 49'ers beaten the winner of the
>> Canadian League? Never. Does that mean that they were not
>> successful?
If this makes any sense to anyone please seek help immediately.
|
88.3049 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 07 1996 18:06 | 17 |
|
The American and National league are both pro baseball leagues.
The NFL and CFL are both pro football leagues.
Each year there are 4 winners, one from each of those leagues.
It would seem to me that winning any of those leagues would be something of
an accomplishment. However I am hearing that winning the AL or NL is not an
accomplishment unless you go on to win the World Series.
Did the 1904 Giants have an unsuccessful year because they refused to play
Boston in the World Series? Sounds like a forfeit to me which is a type of loss
but the owners felt they had won their league and didn't need to play in the
World Series.
George
|
88.3050 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Wed May 08 1996 11:05 | 7 |
|
>> The American and National league are both pro baseball leagues.
>> The NFL and CFL are both pro football leagues.
Nope, poor analogy. Winning the American League is not analgous
to winning the Super Bowl. Winning the World Series is.
|
88.3051 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Wed May 08 1996 11:25 | 11 |
| Joe you say Boston and Cleveland are 3,4 (and counting). Since the
Yankees are obviously #1 then my guess is that the Giants are #2.
Where did Groaner get the lousy chowder, at Mrs Murphy's? By the way
if it's red it's not Boston style chowder but that doesn't mean it's
not good. Also, for some of us Bouillebaise is prefered. I haven't
kept up but some of the DEC cafe's have Legal Seafood chowder on
Fridays - is this what you were referring to?
And bad driving is now coeducational and fun for all ages and exists
everywhere except Concord Ma.
|
88.3052 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed May 08 1996 11:31 | 16 |
|
> Joe you say Boston and Cleveland are 3,4 (and counting). Since the
> Yankees are obviously #1 then my guess is that the Giants are #2.
No; this is in the AL, and among the original teams. Among those
teams, the order is: Yankees - Tigers - Red Sox - Indians - White Sox -
Athletics - Twins - Orioles. Adding in the expansion teams, the
Royals come after the Tigers, the Blue Jays and Brewers after the
White Sox, and the Rangers and Mariners after the Orioles (all through
1993).
In the NL, the order (among teams w/ 10,000 decisions) is Giants -
Dodgers - Cubs - Pirates - Cardinals - Reds - Braves - Phillies
note that 6 of these 8 teams (and 5 of 8 in the AL) have .500+ records.
Joe
|
88.3053 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 12:21 | 17 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3050 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> Nope, poor analogy. Winning the American League is not analgous
> to winning the Super Bowl. Winning the World Series is.
Depends on what analogy you are using. The American and National leagues are
separate leagues with separate rules and separate officials. In particular the
DH makes the game about as different as the rules separating the NFL and CFL
make the game in those leagues different.
The two leagues have an agreement which has lasted since 1901 but they are
still two separate leagues and every year in which the World Series is held two
league champions play each other head to head.
The Red Sox have won their league championship several times since 1918.
George
|
88.3054 | ...on this and other subjects... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed May 08 1996 12:30 | 11 |
|
> Depends on what analogy you are using. The American and National leagues are
> separate leagues with separate rules and separate officials. In particular the
> DH makes the game about as different as the rules separating the NFL and CFL
> make the game in those leagues different.
That's lame. Please, please spare us all further "analogizing"...
glenn
|
88.3055 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 12:40 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3054 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Hardball, good ol' country" >>>
> That's lame. Please, please spare us all further "analogizing"...
Wow Glen, that's really insightfull. Intricate analysis, very informative.
I believe you have enlightened us with the "You're wrong Na-na-NA-Na-na"
form of deductive reasoning.
Boston Pilgrims/Red Sox, 1903, 1904, 1912, 1915, 1916, 1918, 1967, 1975,
1986, American LEAGUE Champions.
So what about 1904? That year they won the AL championship but couldn't play
in the World Series because the Giants refused to play. Would that have been
an unsuccessful year? Nowhere have I seen anything that says they won it by
forfeit, it just wasn't played.
George
|
88.3056 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed May 08 1996 12:40 | 5 |
|
Can't believe your comparing AL and NL play to CFL/NFL???
Thats ludicrous!
|
88.3057 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Wed May 08 1996 13:11 | 3 |
|
Wrong Chappy thats George.
|
88.3058 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed May 08 1996 13:12 | 17 |
| >
> Wow Glen, that's really insightfull. Intricate analysis, very informative.
>
> I believe you have enlightened us with the "You're wrong Na-na-NA-Na-na"
>form of deductive reasoning.
However that may be, the fact is that Glenn speaks for quite a few of us.
Sometimes you don't need to sit there and cite obscure facts that support your
hypothesis and stretch a point to the limits of its tensile strength.
No one shares your view of the AL and NL so give it a rest.
|
88.3059 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed May 08 1996 13:13 | 10 |
|
George,
As your SPORTS arguments go, this one's particularly lame. Unlike
the CFL and NFL, which are seperate, competing leagues, and AL and
NL are (and have been since not long after the founding of the AL)
joined, cooperative leagues. When's the last time you saw the AL
or NL individually market themselves?
Joe
|
88.3060 | They were playing different games... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed May 08 1996 13:18 | 4 |
|
"...and there's a little roller towards Buckner... and the Mets have
a rouge! The Mets score a rouge!"
|
88.3061 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 13:24 | 16 |
| I love it. It's worth the price of admission. Let's check the score card.
Reasons why the AL and NL are separate leagues:
1). Separate Management
2). Separate Rules
3). Separate Officials
4). Quarter century of independent history for the National League
Reasons why they are not separate leagues:
1). Nope, poor analogy.
2). That's lame.
3). Thats ludicrous!
4). No one shares your view of the AL and NL so give it a rest.
5). The Mets score a rouge!"
George
|
88.3062 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Wed May 08 1996 13:27 | 2 |
|
Are the AFC and NFC separate leagues?
|
88.3063 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 13:29 | 25 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3059 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
... but wait, someone choose to debate.
>Unlike
> the CFL and NFL, which are separate, competing leagues, and AL and
> NL are (and have been since not long after the founding of the AL)
> joined, cooperative leagues.
So they have an agreement not to pirate each other's players. Just how much
are the CFL and NFL competing, we haven't seen them try to play in the same
city yet.
>When's the last time you saw the AL
> or NL individually market themselves?
Somehow when you stack marketing up against separate management, separate
rules, and separate officials I think the scale is still tipped in my favor.
Here's another one for my side. The AL has a president. The NL has a
president. By comparison the management structure of MLB is weak with only
an acting commissioner and an executive committee who's power is questionable
at best.
George
|
88.3064 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 13:31 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3062 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> Are the AFC and NFC separate leagues?
No. The AFC and NFC have no separate management, no separate rules. They
are just partitions of the NFL. In fact in the NFL divisions seem to mean more
than conferences. Teams play half their games against teams in their own
divisions but even in terms of scheduling conferences are only one of several
factors.
George
|
88.3065 | Be man enough to admit you screwed up | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Wed May 08 1996 13:35 | 16 |
|
>> Depends on what analogy you are using. The American and National
>> leagues are separate leagues with separate rules and separate
>> officials. In particular the DH makes the game about as different
>> as the rules separating the NFL and CFL make the game in those
>> leagues different.
Lame and getting lamer all the time. The CFL has a different
size field, different number of players on the field, different
number of downs, etc., etc. etc. At the end of the CFL season
they play for the Grey cup. They don't play for the right to meet
the winner of the NFL. The winners of the World Series call
themselves the world champs and the winners of the Super Bowl do
the same. The winners of the American League and CFL don't.
|
88.3066 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 13:39 | 34 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3065 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> Lame and getting lamer all the time. The CFL has a different
> size field, different number of players on the field, different
> number of downs, etc., etc. etc.
All major league baseball teams have different size fields and the two
leagues have a different number of starters, 9 for the NL, 10 for the AL.
In the NL the pitchers hits, in the AL he doesn't, the NL has a lower strike
zone, balks are called differently, etc., etc., etc.
>At the end of the CFL season
> they play for the Grey cup. They don't play for the write to meet
> the winner of the NFL.
So in 1904 did the Red Sox have an unsuccessful year because they couldn't
play the Giants in the World Series? Did the National League champions in the
1870's, and 1890's have meaningless seasons because all they won was the
National League championship?
>The winners of the World Series call
> themselves the world champs and the winners of the Super Bowl do
> the same. The winners of the American League and CFL don't.
No, they call themselves League champions.
> -< Be man enough to admit you're wrong >-
Why, when I've won just about every single point in the argument thus far.
So far your side has one point scored by Joe Huber with his comment about
Marketing.
George
|
88.3067 | And lamer still | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Wed May 08 1996 13:53 | 19 |
|
>> So in 1904 did the Red Sox have an unsuccessful year because
>> they couldn't play the Giants in the World Series? Did the
>> National League champions in the 1870's, and 1890's have
>> meaningless seasons because all they won was the National
>> League championship?
What does that have to do with the NFL being to the CFL what
the American League is to the National League? I'll save you
some time - nothing. The American League teams and the National
League teams play with one purpose - to win their league and
play the champ of the other league. That's not the focus of
the NFL and CFL champs.
>> No, they call themselves League champions.
CFL champs call themselves the Grey Cup champs much as the NFL
champ call themselves the Super Bowl champs.
|
88.3068 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed May 08 1996 14:01 | 1 |
| This note string is taking on all of the aspects of a Salvatore Dali painting.
|
88.3069 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Wed May 08 1996 14:03 | 4 |
|
...except that I find some Dali paintings interesting....
|
88.3070 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 14:09 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3067 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
>The American League teams and the National
> League teams play with one purpose - to win their league and
> play the champ of the other league. That's not the focus of
> the NFL and CFL champs.
Well that's not entirely clear. Just about everywhere I read about the
history of teams they keep track of division and league champions. Almost
every team flies division banners and league pennants.
> CFL champs call themselves the Grey Cup champs much as the NFL
> champ call themselves the Super Bowl champs.
The Grey Cup goes to the CFL League champion. The Superbowl is the NFL
Championship game. The A.L.C.S. determines who wins the American League and
the N.L.C.S. determines who wins the National League.
What league has the World Series champion won besides the one they brought
to the World Series?
George
|
88.3071 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 14:10 | 9 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3069 by AWECIM::RUSSO "claimin!" >>>
> ...except that I find some Dali paintings interesting....
From the flurry of notes I'd gather that quite a few folks find this string
interesting. Either that or there are people abouts who like to dwell in
boring activities.
George
|
88.3072 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed May 08 1996 14:13 | 17 |
|
Please, someone, stop me from replying to this inane argument...
> Well that's not entirely clear. Just about everywhere I read about the
>history of teams they keep track of division and league champions. Almost
>every team flies division banners and league pennants.
And NFL teams keep track of such accomplishments, and NHL, and NBA.
What's your point? And what in the world does this do to support
your point?
> What league has the World Series champion won besides the one they brought
>to the World Series?
The Major Leagues?
Joe
|
88.3073 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed May 08 1996 14:23 | 8 |
| > From the flurry of notes I'd gather that quite a few folks find this string
>interesting.
If your initial premise is off, the rest of your argument falls apart.
|
88.3074 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 14:27 | 26 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3072 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
> And NFL teams keep track of such accomplishments, and NHL, and NBA.
> What's your point? And what in the world does this do to support
> your point?
This argument started because Paul said the Red Sox had sucked for 70 years
and I countered by saying they had won things like division championships,
league championships and that they had a good record. The point you mention
above shows that I am not the only one who recognizes these things.
> The Major Leagues?
Is there a league called "The Major Leagues"? Unlike the NFL/AFL merger, when
the American League was formed back in 1901 they agreed to remain separate
leagues. They crafted an agreement by which they agree not to pirate each
other's players and later that evolved into an agreement to do things like
marketing and collective bargaining with the players but as the DH rule,
definition of strike zones, definition of balks and the like shows, each league
is free to make changes as they see fit as to how the game is played.
> Please, someone, stop me from replying to this inane argument...
What you guys need is a 12 step program to help you at times like this.
George
|
88.3075 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 14:29 | 8 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3073 by CAM::WAY "and keep me steadfast" >>>
>If your initial premise is off, the rest of your argument falls apart.
Big "IF". So far I've seen a lot more heat than light countering my
arguments.
George
|
88.3076 | question??? | BSS::MENDEZ | | Wed May 08 1996 14:33 | 2 |
| why do they call the American League the junior circuit?
|
88.3077 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed May 08 1996 14:34 | 6 |
|
> why do they call the American League the junior circuit?
The AL was founded in 1901, the NL in 1876.
Joe
|
88.3078 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Wed May 08 1996 15:35 | 15 |
| In Major League baseball prior to the TV era - and I'll mark the
Mazeroski homerun as my point in time - the league championship was
much more important than the World Series. The main importance of the
latter was the money involved but it was basically considered an
exhibition between the league champions and the outcome not to be taken
seriously as a denominator of superiority.
All of the literature published prior to (say) 1950 has this theme and
the big games and plays all centered around league championship drama
(Merkle's boner right up to the Thompson homerun).
This mode of thinking did not fit in with the ways of tv and a
concentrated media movement finally established the World Series
Championship as the end-point goal as opposed to pre 1960 thinking of
the pennant as the goal and the World Series as the icing on the cake.
|
88.3079 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Wed May 08 1996 15:52 | 12 |
|
>> What you guys need is a 12 step program to help you at times like this.
What you need is the backbone to admit when you're all wet. Even
when you say something as dumb as "The Braves are as much a Boston
team as the Red Sox" you still try and cover.
BTW - your point about baseball fields being different sizes was
another lulu. All baseball parks are different even within
the two leagues. The NFL and CFL each have one standard field
but of different sizes.
|
88.3080 | I think this is the right note for this | CSLALL::BRULE | Springtime at last | Wed May 08 1996 15:54 | 4 |
| Boy the Rocket sure looked good last night. I think the 96 Salary Drive
is kicking in.
Mike
|
88.3081 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Wed May 08 1996 15:59 | 19 |
|
The AL and NL have 1 commissioner (albeit a fake one right now, but
that isn't part of the debate). Since there is a single person
overseeing both the AL and NL, that tells me that there is only 1
league.
The NFL and CFL have 2 different and distinct commisioners. Thus, two
completely different leagues.
I don't care if they call it the the American "League". It simply
isn't true. And before anyone starts defending the other stance, just
remember that Japan/Cuba/... are not even invited to become World
Champions (read: World Series). Using words does not make something
true.
How's that for making a point...
Marc
|
88.3082 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 16:41 | 40 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3079 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> What you need is the backbone to admit when you're all wet.
Careful here Tommy, you're asking me to do something that you have never
done. Show me one note where you have ever admitted you were wrong. You
should not ask other people to do what you can't ever do.
>Even
> when you say something as dumb as "The Braves are as much a Boston
> team as the Red Sox" you still try and cover.
I think that what I said was that all these teams consist of grown men
playing children's games and the relationship between the vast majority of fans
and pro teams is pure fantasy. In reality the Braves are neither a Boston or an
Atlanta team, they are a Ted Turner team. Jane Fonda has more of a legal claim
to this team than most fans.
However if we want to indulge in the fantasy world of making believe we
have something to do with these teams then my fantasy about the Braves being
a Boston team because they played here once is no worse than the typical
fan's more traditional but still fantasy reason for how they are connected to
their team. None of this is serious, it's all make believe. Why can't I make
believe my way while you make believe your way?
> BTW - your point about baseball fields being different sizes was
> another lulu. All baseball parks are different even within
> the two leagues.
Yes, but in Baseball the actual playing area differs from park to park. Hit
a ball 400 feet toward left field in one park it's a home run, in another it's
caught on the warning track for an out.
Both Willie Mays and Babe Ruth were great home run hitters but one reason
they are 1st and 3rd respectively is that they both played part of their career
in the Polo Grounds where anything over 280 feet down the line was a home run.
Try to find a stadium in football where the shape of the field has that kind of
impact on the game.
George
|
88.3083 | Step #7 in my program... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed May 08 1996 16:41 | 9 |
|
> What you guys need is a 12 step program to help you at times like this.
"Cynicism is usually a way that people who can't deal with their
feelings hide their anger. Fine I have no problem with that but what
I would like to know is what is this anger really about?"
-- George Maiewski, Daily Affirmations
|
88.3084 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed May 08 1996 16:50 | 14 |
|
>> BTW - your point about baseball fields being different sizes was
>> another lulu. All baseball parks are different even within
>> the two leagues.
>
> Try to find a stadium in football where the shape of the field has that kind of
> impact on the game.
Logic buffs, technically, is this called a non-sequitural tangent,
or a tangential non-sequitur?
glenn
|
88.3085 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 08 1996 16:56 | 23 |
| <<< Note 88.3083 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Hardball, good ol' country" >>>
> "Cynicism is usually a way that people who can't deal with their
> feelings hide their anger. Fine I have no problem with that but what
> I would like to know is what is this anger really about?"
I'm not afraid to express the reason for my anger. My anger is over the fact
that people are telling me I don't have the freedom to be a fan for the reasons
I want to be a fan.
Except for the few people who are actually associated with these teams like
NAZZ who seemed to know Reggie Lewis personally and Ed Galleger who's son is
playing A ball in the Ranger's organization everyone in this file is a fan for
some make believe reason.
So my reasons are a bit more creative, they are no more make believe than
anyone else. Only difference, I'm not allowed that privilege without getting a
ton of flack. Since my freedom is challenged, I become angry and that leads
to cynicism.
Meanwhile I'm still waiting to hear why the rest of the cynics are angry.
George
|
88.3086 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Wed May 08 1996 17:13 | 4 |
|
Should the NFL, CFL and European Cup winner have a round robin
tournament? All games are called football, they just all have
different rules.
|
88.3087 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Wed May 08 1996 17:56 | 9 |
| >
> Try to find a stadium in football where the shape of the field has that kind of
> impact on the game.
>> Logic buffs, technically, is this called a non-sequitural tangent,
>> or a tangential non-sequitur?
It'd almost be funny if he didn't think he was making a real point.
|
88.3088 | get over it... | BSS::MENDEZ | | Wed May 08 1996 19:03 | 18 |
| actually the "mistake by the lake" has a field that is in sad shape
and probably affected a few games. How about those fields that are
frozen tundra like lambeau, or soldier. Or how about those plastic
fields and injuries. BTW texas stadium has a big crown in the middle
of the field that makes it tough for opposing qb's to throw side
patterns.
Seems to me that the National League and the junior circuit are
part of MLB.
Anyway the Red Sox have had some successful campaigns just not
the BEST campaigns for that particular year.
BTW george, I still say "old billy was right..lets kill all the lawyers
kill em tonight"
|
88.3089 | Give it a rest you are not even close to being in this universe | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Thu May 09 1996 07:37 | 15 |
|
re 88.3082 by CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI
George first of all Babe Ruth and Willie Mays are not 1st and 3rd
respectively in career home runs. You claim to be such a big Braves
fan ever hear of Hank Aaron? You know hit #715 on an April night off
Mike Marshall. (I think it was him). Oh and while I'm at it when did
Babe Ruth play in the Polo Grounds? Did he moonlight for the Giants
while playing for the Yankees?
Jerry
|
88.3090 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Thu May 09 1996 08:38 | 3 |
|
George's encyclopedia is old - you think he knows all this stuff off
the top of his head - NO.
|
88.3092 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 09:21 | 7 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3087 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> It'd almost be funny if he didn't think he was making a real point.
We're talking about sports here, there's no such thing as a real point.
George
|
88.3093 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 09:22 | 15 |
| RE<<< Note 88.3089 by AD::HEATH "The albatross and whales they are my brother" >>>
>Oh and while I'm at it when did
> Babe Ruth play in the Polo Grounds? Did he moonlight for the Giants
> while playing for the Yankees?
Ruth was sold to the Yankees around 1920. Yankee Stadium wasn't built until
1923. Where do you think Babe played his 1st couple years in New York?
> -< Give it a rest you are not even close to being in this universe >-
Your telling me Ruth played in Yankee Stadium 2 years before it was built and
I'm the one in the wrong Universe?
George
|
88.3094 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu May 09 1996 09:32 | 9 |
|
What about Hank Aaron.
Two years does not a career make.
Chap
|
88.3095 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 09:37 | 7 |
|
Aaron never played home games in the Polo Grounds. Ruth and Mays did.
They say Ruth cried when he heard they would not be playing in the Polo
Grounds any more.
George
|
88.3096 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu May 09 1996 10:07 | 8 |
|
I'm Surprised I heard most of his Homeruns were to straight away
left field. Not down the line? Care to elaborate?
Chap
|
88.3097 | It was Al Downing | CNTROL::SALMON | | Thu May 09 1996 10:16 | 3 |
| re -88.3089:
Hank broke Ruth's record off Al Downing.
|
88.3098 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 10:37 | 41 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3096 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> I'm Surprised I heard most of his Homeruns were to straight away
> left field. Not down the line? Care to elaborate?
I just bought this really great book called "Diamonds". It's the history of
baseball parks starting with the 1st field the Knickerbockers used back in 1845
to the present. I bought it mainly because it had the only picture of Braves
Field taken from the air that I've ever seen but it's got ton's of other great
stuff as well.
Along with the discussion and either pictures or drawings of parks they talk
some about the games played in those parks. They showed a picture taken from
the 3rd base side of the Polo Grounds looking toward home plate down the 1st
base line and it shows Ruth pulling one into the stands for a home run. They
said Ruth was sad when he heard they were leaving the Polo Grounds for a new
stadium.
According to the pictures the Polo Grounds was U shaped. The diamond was
centered with home plate at the bottom of the U. They listed it as 260 feet
down either line and it was something like a country mile out to deep center
(where Willie made "The Catch").
Also I was interested to learn that the Polo Grounds was just across the
river from Yankee Stadium. A picture from the air showed both parks. The U
faced East and Willie was running right toward Yankee Stadium before making
that catch.
Unlike Ebbets field which the book called one of the 3 "Jewel Parks" along
with Wrigley and Fenway, the polo grounds was one of the giant parks like
Braves Field which could hold an enormous crowd.
They also have a map showing where the AL and NL parks were in Boston before
they moved to the new parks in the Fens back around 1912-1915. the AL park was
on Hunnington Ave across the street and a bit up from where the MFA is now and
the NL park The "Pavilion" built on the Southend Grounds was just across the
tracks to the South East off Columbus Ave.
Great book, pick it up if you have a chance.
George
|
88.3099 | Inquiring minds and all that!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu May 09 1996 10:49 | 18 |
|
Ya But (sorry Kev).
What I asked you was that Most of Ruth's homeruns were to either
straight away or Left Center. So what the hell difference did it make
about the 206 down the line?
Plus he hit 75% - 80% of his homeruns after he moved into Yankee
stadium.
And again. Why didn't you know Hank Aaron was the homerun
Champion? Didn't he play for your beloved Braves?
Chap
|
88.3100 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 11:10 | 30 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3099 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> What I asked you was that Most of Ruth's homeruns were to either
> straight away or Left Center. So what the hell difference did it make
> about the 206 down the line?
Despite the way he let himself go near the end, back in the early 20's Ruth
was a tremendous athlete. Most likely he could hit the ball where ever he
wanted and when he was in the Polo Grounds he probably adjusted to the short
porch and pulled the ball. Seems that if he could only hit home runs to center
he would have been delighted to leave the Polo Grounds.
But if you don't believe he did, then fine. If you are interested I'll get
the name of the author and publisher of that book and you can write him a
letter straightening him out.
> Plus he hit 75% - 80% of his homeruns after he moved into Yankee
> stadium.
What do you bet he didn't know that was going to happen the day he heard
they were moving out of the Polo Grounds to a new stadium who's design he
had not yet seen.
> And again. Why didn't you know Hank Aaron was the homerun
> Champion? Didn't he play for your beloved Braves?
I knew I just got it backwards. I was typing too fast and made a mistake. It
happens.
George
|
88.3101 | happens quite alot I'm afraid | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Thu May 09 1996 11:12 | 0 |
88.3102 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 11:43 | 10 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3101 by XTATIC::CHILDS >>>
> -< happens quite alot I'm afraid >-
Unlike some I own up to my errors.
And like the others people like to talk about this one was an obscure side
issue relative to this debate.
George
|
88.3103 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Thu May 09 1996 11:45 | 4 |
|
>> Unlike some I own up to my errors.
Given the magnitude of some of them, you have no choice.
|
88.3104 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 11:54 | 14 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3103 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> Given the magnitude of some of them, you have no choice.
Depends on what you mean by magnitude. If you mean they are obvious things
being made as obscure side issues to the real debate that I made because of my
carelessness then yes. But if you are saying as you often do that they are
central to the issue then as usual you are wrong.
On the central issues of this debate as usual you are on such weak ground
that your only hope is looking for obscure mistakes having little to do with
the issue at hand.
George
|
88.3105 | (insert) shoulders shrugging.... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu May 09 1996 13:06 | 9 |
|
All I know is that if I was typing about who has the record for
most consecutive games with a HR. Or who has the longest hitting streak
or who won the most WS championships I wouldn't make an error like
that.
But than again I only root for one team so......
|
88.3106 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 13:39 | 24 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3105 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> All I know is that if I was typing about who has the record for
> most consecutive games with a HR. Or who has the longest hitting streak
> or who won the most WS championships I wouldn't make an error like
> that.
Fine, you are not as likely to get distracted and get minor points in an
argument mixed up. Sill the reason my opponents find these side issues so
interesting is that they are so afraid to address the main points.
No one has yet to give me a reason why I should not think of the American
League championships the Red Sox have won as an accomplishment which was the
thing we were discussing. I've heard all about how the Super Bowl champ is
world champ, football fields play different when it's cold, Aaron is home
run champ, Ruth hit to center all manor of distractions but still no reason
not to feel good about the Red Sox being champions of the American League
once in each of the last 3 decades.
> But than again I only root for one team so......
Yes, but that one team is the Yankees so you have my condolences.
George
|
88.3107 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Thu May 09 1996 13:45 | 8 |
|
>> No one has yet to give me a reason why I should not think of
>> the American League championships the Red Sox have won as an
>> accomplishment which was the
It's an accomplishment. Just not a very big one. And you're brain
dead if you think it's the equivalent of winning the Super Bowl.
|
88.3108 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 13:55 | 17 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3107 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> It's an accomplishment. Just not a very big one.
Your opinion, fine. A reason why you might not be happy, fine. But give me
some solid reasons why some random fan who chooses to be really happy about it
should not be allowed to feel that way?
>And you're brain
> dead if you think it's the equivalent of winning the Super Bowl.
And your brain dead if you think an avid baseball fan who doesn't like
football would agree with you. I know a couple guys who love baseball but can't
stand football and could care less who wins the superbowl. To them how is a
Super Bowl victory more important than an American League championship?
George
|
88.3109 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Thu May 09 1996 14:00 | 14 |
| >> But give me some solid reasons why some random fan who chooses
>> to be really happy about it should not be allowed to feel that way?
I could care less but I doubt that any Red Sox fan is "really happy"
about winning league championships in each of the last three decades.
I don't know any who are. You say you are but I don't believe you.
>> To them how is a Super Bowl victory more important than an American
>> League championship?
Didn't say it was "more important". I said it's not the equivalent.
Two different things.
|
88.3110 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Thu May 09 1996 14:15 | 15 |
|
I suppose I shouldn't be surprised, but about 30 replies ago I
challenged the NFL vs CFL and AL vs NL conversation. Mainly because
George said noone had said anything more than something like "NA NA I'm
right you're wrong".
So George, how come you didn't respond to the very real challenge.
Afraid of what real data provides?!?!
BTW, I do agree with you concerning a successful season not requiring a
championship. Others will disagree of course. However, if you are
going to use analogies, use valid ones.
Marc
|
88.3111 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 14:38 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3110 by CSC32::MACGREGOR "Colorado: the TRUE mid-west" >>>
> So George, how come you didn't respond to the very real challenge.
> Afraid of what real data provides?!?!
Sorry, I'm arguing here with 10 guys at once so if I missed the note it was
an oversight. I would be delighted to enter another branch of the debate if you
would point me to your note. I'd do a search but I don't want to eat up Frank's
CPU.
George
|
88.3112 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 14:42 | 15 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3109 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> I could care less but I doubt that any Red Sox fan is "really happy"
> about winning league championships in each of the last three decades.
I knew a lot of people who celebrated when the Sox won their American League
championships. I also met people who were disappointed they didn't win the
World Series but were jazzed that they got to play in it.
> I don't know any who are. You say you are but I don't believe you.
You can't even show me an authoritative set of rules that defines what a fan
is so how would you know if someone was a fan or not?
George
|
88.3113 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 14:48 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3088 by BSS::MENDEZ >>>
> BTW george, I still say "old billy was right..lets kill all the lawyers
> kill em tonight"
You don't have the quote quite right. I believe it was in Henry VI or one of
the history plays there were two guys talking, the town butcher and the town
bumb. The town bumb was going on about how if he were king he would force
everyone to buy his products, shop in his shops and would generally terrorize
the population. The Butcher then told him that if he wanted to do that "First
you would have to kill all the lawyers".
What that quote says is that people who want there to be haves who are safe
from the have nots, better watch out for lawyers.
George
|
88.3114 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Thu May 09 1996 15:11 | 5 |
|
QUOTE OF THE YEAR:
"I'm arguing here with 10 guys at once so if I missed the note it was
an oversight."
|
88.3115 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 15:15 | 9 |
|
Paul, if that was the best quote you've seen this year you've been reading
this file far too much.
Time for you to expand your horizons a bit and find yourself a good book.
By the way aren't you ashamed of yourself for starting this latest LDUC?
George
|
88.3116 | HTH's | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu May 09 1996 16:28 | 12 |
|
George winning the AL Pennant is an accomplishment. But it's not
that big of a deal. In 1981 yeah I was happy that the Yanks got to the
World Series, but there was that big hole that was there that I only
felt in 77,78.
If you didn't have so many allegiances you also might feel this
way, but it seems like you always got a crutch?
Chap
|
88.3117 | This make's the McGlaughlin group look sane. | CSLALL::BRULE | Springtime at last | Thu May 09 1996 16:44 | 4 |
| The Red Sox are getting smoked 6-0. Now back to George and Company
in the Crossfire. Sorry for the interruption.
Mike
|
88.3118 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu May 09 1996 16:46 | 10 |
|
Sele got hammered again 6 runs in 2/3 of an inning.
Is he the biggest media created god since Bam Bam Muelens or
what!! :-)
Chap
|
88.3119 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Thu May 09 1996 17:40 | 15 |
|
>> I knew a lot of people who celebrated when the Sox won their
>> American League championships. I also met people who were
>> disappointed they didn't win the World Series but were jazzed
>> that they got to play in it.
You play fantasy baseball. I have no doubt that you know
all sorts of get-a-lifers but I don't believe that you know
antone who was content just to be in the World Series.
>> You can't even show me an authoritative set of rules that
>> defines what a fan is so how would you know if someone was
>> a fan or not?
Never said you weren't a fan. I said I didn't believe you.
|
88.3120 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Thu May 09 1996 17:51 | 18 |
|
Sure he does Tommy, me, I was happy. This team had a habit of getting
smoked in the second half of the season. Somewhere around the all-fan
game, the Red Sox changed coaches and then ran off an incredible 20-4
(or something like that) record to take over first in the divsion.
They hung on to win the pennant, beat the Angels in dramatic fashion,
and then make it to the World Series.
I was very happy for them and excited that I was going to see them play
at least 4 more games.
However, all of this does not change the fact that they were NOT league
champions. Baseball has ONE commissioner for ~26 teams, thus a single
league. The NFL has ONE commisioner and the CFL has yet another
commisioner, thus two separate leagues.
Marc
|
88.3121 | | MUTEX::LIU | | Thu May 09 1996 18:09 | 4 |
|
Almost any Cubs fan alive would be happy to be in the World Series. Last
time the Cubs won the pennant was 1945, over 50 years ago.
|
88.3122 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 09 1996 21:33 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3119 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> You play fantasy baseball. I have no doubt that you know
> all sorts of get-a-lifers but I don't believe that you know
> antone who was content just to be in the World Series.
Tommy you split me up. Like the rest of us sports fans you hero worship guys
you don't even know who go out and play children's games like basketball and
football then you tell me I need to get a life because I actually compete with
other guys by playing rotisserie baseball?
I'm going to go way out on a limb and guess that you think this discussion
of what a league championship means is about something real.
Right, if you are one of the billionaires that actually owns one of these
teams.
George
|
88.3123 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri May 10 1996 09:05 | 11 |
| I'll butt in for a second here and say I was one fan who hit his head
on a ceiling, after shooting out of a chair when Hendu went deep in game
5 of the Angels series. Yup, I was happy they got into the Series that
year. I'll also admit I woke up our then 2-year-old to watch the end
of game 6 against the Mets, thinking that history was being made.
You do have to admit that the last three times the Sox have made it to
the World Series, they've been highly entertaining, which IS what we
watch the games for isn't it?
Steve
|
88.3124 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri May 10 1996 09:55 | 18 |
| > I'll butt in for a second here and say I was one fan who hit his head
> on a ceiling, after shooting out of a chair when Hendu went deep in game
> 5 of the Angels series. Yup, I was happy they got into the Series that
> year. I'll also admit I woke up our then 2-year-old to watch the end
> of game 6 against the Mets, thinking that history was being made.
I guess I was the Connecticut version of that fan.
> You do have to admit that the last three times the Sox have made it to
> the World Series, they've been highly entertaining, which IS what we
> watch the games for isn't it?
I agree. In the very end of the good part of game 6 I remember thinking "Gee,
what's it going to be like tomorrow, when they don't have anything left to
prove"
The past two years have been disheartening, but it'll get better.
|
88.3125 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Fri May 10 1996 10:54 | 12 |
| As any Pirate fan I too was elated when the Bucs
each made it as far as the NLCS, not to mention
the Steelers making it to SB XXX. But when they
loose at that level the "down" isn't as bad as if
they didn't make it at all.
Conversely, the "up" of winning the AFC or NL
championship is no where near as high it felt in
1979 when the Steel City was _The_City_of_Champions.
billl
|
88.3126 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Fri May 10 1996 11:19 | 19 |
|
>> Like the rest of us sports fans you hero worship guys you don't
>> even know who go out and play children's games like basketball and
Speak for yourself. I don't "hero worship" any sports figure.
>> then you tell me I need to get a life because I actually compete
>> with other guys by playing rotisserie baseball?
It's the biggest geek activity known to man. Grown men sitting
around collecting stats and *pretending* to be baseball managers
or GMs or whatever you pretend to be. You may as well be playing
army or doctor.
>> Right, if you are one of the billionaires that actually owns one
>> of these teams.
Whoa. I ain't the guy pretending to be one.
|
88.3127 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Fri May 10 1996 11:20 | 6 |
|
Yup, at the time I was happy to win the ALCS, too. Am I happy
looking back that the Sox won league championship in each of the
last three decades? Nope. I want to see the Sox win the World
Series and nothing less.
|
88.3128 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Fri May 10 1996 11:23 | 10 |
| >> As any Pirate fan I too was elated when the Bucs
>> each made it as far as the NLCS, not to mention
>> the Steelers making it to SB XXX. But when they
>> loose at that level the "down" isn't as bad as if
>> they didn't make it at all.
I dunno billl, watching "gimpy" Sid Bream scoring the winning run
for the Braves in the NLCS still makes me puke. That day. Pittsburgh
was pretty "down". But, as pointed out, at least the Pirates earned the
right to play in the series.
|
88.3129 | Generations | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Fri May 10 1996 11:27 | 34 |
| Perspective:
> >> No one has yet to give me a reason why I should not think of
> >> the American League championships the Red Sox have won as an
> >> accomplishment which was the
> It's an accomplishment. Just not a very big one.
It really surprises me that there is a dispute here. The clue may be
Bill Breen's reminder that the World Series was not always the culmination
of the season, but the dessert. Tommy's characterization of winning a
pennant (above) is, to me, way way off base. Winning a pennant means
leading a division after 162 games (or having no worse than the league's
fourth best record) and then winning eight more games against teams of
a similar description. I call that a major accomplishment, but maybe
it's a generational thing. Clearly, for a number of you, the regular
season is just the prelude to the playoffs, even though fewer baseball
teams make the playoffs than in other sports. And I can see how those
of you too young to remember eight team leagues would view the progression
to the World Series the same way you do that to the Super Bowl or the
Stanley Cup finals. This tells me that we traditionalists, who opposed
the extra round of playoffs, might well have been right.
> And you're brain
> dead if you think it's the equivalent of winning the Super Bowl.
Like George, I don't much care for football, especially the NFL variety,
but FWIW, the Super Bowl winner has won a division after 16 games (whose
difficulty varies considerably from team to team due to seeding) and then
won four more games.
Of course, interleague play will weaken my argument a bit.
Steve
|
88.3130 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Fri May 10 1996 11:52 | 2 |
| The Superbowl champ and the League champ is the same thing for the last
decade anyhow
|
88.3131 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 10 1996 11:59 | 17 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3126 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> It's the biggest geek activity known to man. Grown men sitting
> around collecting stats and *pretending* to be baseball managers
> or GMs or whatever you pretend to be. You may as well be playing
> army or doctor.
Tommy, once again you have taken hypocrisy to new hights never before known
to man kind. No one in Rotisserie that I am aware of is pretending anything. We
are simply playing a game.
However, weren't you the one who actually put a letter written in 2nd person
to one of the college coaches in this notes file a while back? How much
pretending was going on there? Do you actually think that coach reads this file
or that if he did he would give a good rip what you had to say?
George
|
88.3132 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Fri May 10 1996 12:54 | 14 |
|
>> Tommy, once again you have taken hypocrisy to new hights never
>> before known to man kind. No one in Rotisserie that I am aware
>> of is pretending anything.
There's a reason they call it *fantasy* baseball.
>> However, weren't you the one who actually put a letter written
>> in 2nd person to one of the college coaches in this notes file
>> a while back?
No, that wasn't me. How do you write a letter in the 2nd person
anyways?
|
88.3133 | Small nit.. | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Fri May 10 1996 12:58 | 9 |
|
I believe its called Rotisserie Baseball and Fantasy Football?
:-)
Chap
|
88.3134 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Fri May 10 1996 13:08 | 14 |
|
>> Tommy's characterization of winning a pennant (above) is, to me,
>> way way off base. Winning a pennant means leading a division after
>> 162 games (or having no worse than the league's fourth best record)
>> and then winning eight more games against teams of a similar descrip-
>> tion. I call that a major accomplishment,
I see your point and concede it to you. However from a Red Sox fan's
perspective, I don't look back on the years when the Sox went to the
WS and lost with any particular fondness. Not at all. My father has
never seen the Sox win the WS, I've never seen it and I fear my son
never will either. Winning the league in each of the last three
decades means virtually nothing to me.
|
88.3135 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 10 1996 14:56 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3132 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> There's a reason they call it *fantasy* baseball.
We call it Rotisserie but what's your point? Every game has some element of
fantasy. When guys play basketball they all share the common fantasy that it
means something when you throw the ball into the basket. That's what games are,
make believe competition, as opposed to real competition like you might see
between Intel and Motorola or Digital and HP.
One thing for sure, given that there is fantasy involved because we are
talking about a game, at least guys playing Rotisserie are really doing
something, playing a game. Name one aspect of being a typical College
Basketball fan that is not pure fantasy.
George
|
88.3136 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Fri May 10 1996 15:02 | 5 |
| >Name one aspect of being a typical College
>Basketball fan that is not pure fantasy.
Destroying my crutch from smashing it on a hardwood floor after Keith
Smart hit the jumper in 1987... :-)
|
88.3137 | Assuming a typo | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Fri May 10 1996 15:09 | 4 |
| >Destroying my crutch from smashing it
Well I heard you say you have children so thank heavens there was no
permanent damage.
|
88.3138 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Fri May 10 1996 15:13 | 6 |
| >>Destroying my crutch from smashing it
>Well I heard you say you have children so thank heavens there was no
>permanent damage.
Sorry, no typo. I'm not into that sort of thing... :-)
|
88.3139 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri May 10 1996 15:51 | 4 |
| The only REAL competition is war. All others pale in comparison.
;^)
|
88.3140 | | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Fri May 10 1996 16:25 | 6 |
| geez I always thought the team that went the farthest in the playoff won the
most money and the teams went the farthest in the NCAA tournement won the most
money out of the pool for their respective conferences. Real money just like
Dec and Intel battle for........
mike
|
88.3141 | LDUC alert | BSS::MENDEZ | | Fri May 10 1996 16:28 | 4 |
| Looks like a LDUC is brewing on what is fantasy and what is not.
I'm sure someone is going to ask for the specific definition of
fantasy and the prolly lead on to the rules and what not...
|
88.3142 | | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Fri May 10 1996 16:31 | 4 |
| naw it's easy, fantasy is Elle Mcpherson and me on a beach in Australia with
enough cash to never have to work the rest of my life. Reality is my wife and
I work 90 plus hours a week between us and just staying one step ahead of the
bill collector!
|
88.3143 | yeah but is that in websters?? | BSS::MENDEZ | | Fri May 10 1996 16:41 | 2 |
|
|
88.3144 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Fri May 10 1996 17:22 | 8 |
| Now that accounts with Las Vegas Books can be had over the internet etc
I'm surprised the Rotis guys don't spend the time and put up real money
and have real results.
In fact alloting a fantasy $1000 and betting vs the line and at the end
of the season whoever has the most "cash" wins would be a better
contest. It would require some work, you'd have to have a
sophisticated setup to limit the work.
|
88.3145 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 10 1996 17:56 | 26 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3144 by AKOCOA::BREEN "Better days are coming bye and bye. BS" >>>
> Now that accounts with Las Vegas Books can be had over the internet etc
> I'm surprised the Rotis guys don't spend the time and put up real money
> and have real results.
Outside of DEC, people do use real money. The way real money Rotisserie works
is that everyone shows up on draft day with a real $250. During the draft they
take turns calling out the name of a real baseball player and the Rotisserie
players bid on that guy. Who ever bids most throws in that much money into the
pot.
Someone like Barry Bonds might go for $40 where as someone like Mike Maddux
might go for a buck or two. At the end of the season prizes are given out from
that pot. It can be either winner take all or some other scheme giving out
money for 1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.
I don't see how Las Vegas numbers could work since every Rotisserie team
consists of a unique combination of players. I've never heard that Las Vegas
produces numbers for how individual players will perform.
In side DEC, of course, we never bet real money. At one time we chipped in
dues and gave out plaques and trophies but that practice seems to have faded
away.
George
|
88.3146 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Mon May 13 1996 09:47 | 24 |
| >
> Outside of DEC, people do use real money. The way real money Rotisserie works
>is that everyone shows up on draft day with a real $250. During the draft they
>take turns calling out the name of a real baseball player and the Rotisserie
>players bid on that guy. Who ever bids most throws in that much money into the
>pot.
>
Kind of like when I play poker with my buddies.
> Someone like Barry Bonds might go for $40 where as someone like Mike Maddux
>might go for a buck or two. At the end of the season prizes are given out from
>that pot. It can be either winner take all or some other scheme giving out
>money for 1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.
Kind of like a full house might go for $40, but a pair of deuces might go for
$1 or $2.
> In side DEC, of course, we never bet real money. At one time we chipped in
>dues and gave out plaques and trophies but that practice seems to have faded
>away.
Different ownership. We're kind like owned by Marge Schott now.
|
88.3147 | String up the knuckleballer! | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon May 13 1996 11:45 | 32 |
|
Contrast in attitude:
"I threw the ball very well. I couldn't have thrown it any better.
I just couldn't control some things that happened around me."
Tim Wakefield, after another brilliant 6 IP, 6 H, 5 BB,
4 ER performance, potential win lost to blowpen
"I put the guys in an awful situation. With one pitch, I went from
a good outing to a not-so-good outing. They fought hard for me all
day and I let them down."
Roger Clemens, after a similarly mediocre 7+ IP, 8 H, 4 BB,
6 ER performance, potential win lost to blowpen
Obviously this team has many problems but thus far to my observation
it has only one rapidly growing Jeff Russell-sized cancer, name of
Wakefield, Tim. The cancer must be removed. This is not an isolated
incident; Wakefield has generally stunk but has never offered up more
than a finger pointed in another direction. The finger-pointer is
baseball's worst offender, worse even than the hopeless, spent-arm
reliever, Belinda, Stan.
Now we know what Jimmy Leyland meant when he stated last year to
just wait and watch, this guy is both full of it and himself, and
won't be there when you need him...
glenn
|
88.3148 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon May 13 1996 11:50 | 22 |
|
> Sure he does Tommy, me, I was happy. This team had a habit of getting
> smoked in the second half of the season. Somewhere around the all-fan
> game, the Red Sox changed coaches and then ran off an incredible 20-4
> (or something like that) record to take over first in the divsion.
> They hung on to win the pennant, beat the Angels in dramatic fashion,
> and then make it to the World Series.
>
> I was very happy for them and excited that I was going to see them play
> at least 4 more games.
You were so delirious that you confused the 1988 and 1986 seasons,
Marc. But I suppose there were people who were happy when the A's
swept the Sox out in four that year, too.
Sorry, Marc, but we just can't let things like that go here in SPROTS.
Kinda like when a so-called "Braves fan" forgets about Henry Aaron...
;-)
glenn
|
88.3149 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Mon May 13 1996 12:00 | 11 |
|
>Sorry, Marc, but we just can't let things like that go here in SPROTS.
>Kinda like when a so-called "Braves fan" forgets about Henry Aaron...
Guess I can finally say that old age has hit me 8^)
'86, '88, what can I say, I was in high school for '86 and college for
'88. I don't remember much of those years 8^)
Marc
|
88.3150 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Mon May 13 1996 12:05 | 12 |
| >
> '86, '88, what can I say, I was in high school for '86 and college for
> '88. I don't remember much of those years 8^)
>
> Marc
>
Shoot, boy, yer still wet behind the ears.
8^)
|
88.3151 | Don't make no sense | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Mon May 13 1996 12:05 | 11 |
|
>> When guys play basketball they all share the common fantasy that it
>> means something when you throw the ball into the basket.
>> at least guys playing Rotisserie are really doing something, playing
>> a game.
Guys who play a real game like basketball are fantasizing but guys
who fantasize about being GMs are really doing something?
|
88.3152 | watching year 42 fade fast....... | XTATIC::CHILDS | | Mon May 13 1996 12:06 | 8 |
|
> '86, '88, what can I say, I was in high school for '86 and college for
> '88. I don't remember much of those years 8^)
this ought to ruin about 80% of this notesfilers' day.........
;^(
|
88.3153 | | GENRAL::WADE | Ah'm Yo Huckleberry... | Mon May 13 1996 12:21 | 6 |
|
Don't you fret none MikeyC. I was in college up until a couple
of months ago and I'm not wet behind the ears. Hell, I'm grey
all around my ears! :*)
Claybone
|
88.3154 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon May 13 1996 12:23 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3151 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> Guys who play a real game like basketball are fantasizing but guys
> who fantasize about being GMs are really doing something?
I have never met anyone playing rotisserie baseball who claims to fantasize
about being a real GM. Every player I've talked to seems to be aware that
they are playing a game.
- Guys who actually play basketball are playing a real game.
- Guys who play rotisserie baseball are playing a real game.
- Guys who pretend they are somehow associated with the actual guys who
play college or pro basketball when those guys wouldn't know them if they
tripped over them in their living room are the ones who are fantasizing.
George
|
88.3155 | ex | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Mon May 13 1996 13:15 | 15 |
|
>> I have never met anyone playing rotisserie baseball who claims
>> to fantasize about being a real GM.
And I've never met a duck who claims to be one but the quacking,
the bill, the feathers and the web feet give them away. The very
essence of fantasy baseball is to pretend that you're a GM doing
the things that GMS do ie., draft and trade to build the best
possible team. Again, that's why it's called fantasy baseball.
If that's how you choose to spend your time - fine. But it's
ridiculous to pretend you're above all the common trappings of
fandom when you obviously spend an inordinate amount of time
fantasizing about sports and reading sports history.
|
88.3156 | Sprot's version of "The Worm Auroboros" | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Mon May 13 1996 15:34 | 1 |
|
|
88.3157 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue May 14 1996 09:39 | 10 |
| This in from USA Today's WWW.
"RHP Roger Clemens moved past Sandy Koufax into 25th place on the all-time
strikeout list Sunday."
He's also chasing Cy Young for the #1 spot for Red Sox franchise wins. I
thought I read he has about 10 more to go.
George
|
88.3158 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Tue May 14 1996 11:34 | 3 |
| Somebody is closing in on Ted Williams for his place on the all time
RBI leaderboard. I think it's Murray. The two are alike in one way:
They both hate reporters.
|
88.3159 | Prospect Mospect!! Frankie pitched pretty good the other night | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed May 22 1996 12:07 | 8 |
|
With Garciaparra out the rest of the season.(torn Tendon) Does that
make the Red Sox Run at the WS in 2001 now 2003?
Chap
|
88.3160 | If we're to gloat in another's misfortune, make it a Yankee | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed May 22 1996 12:31 | 17 |
|
> -< Prospect Mospect!! Frankie pitched pretty good the other night >-
Next stop, Cooperstown. A couple of minor miracles later, he may
even turn out to be the next Sterling Hitchcock...
> With Garciaparra out the rest of the season.(torn Tendon) Does that
> make the Red Sox Run at the WS in 2001 now 2003?
Not really. Garciaparra was not going to be a major part of this
season's plans. It's not good that he loses a season's worth of
minor-league experience, but nor has anything catastrophic occured,
such as losing the use of his throwing arm after initiating a street
brawl as happened with a certain unnamed 1st-pick bonus baby...
glenn
|
88.3161 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed May 22 1996 12:36 | 11 |
|
Touche!!
But I'm not one of the ones in here talking about the Red Sox
"AWESOME" farm system and where there gonna be in 2-4 years either.
Early seventies I remember a team who had a pretty good bunch of
youngsters coming up, and they still haven't won anything.....
|
88.3162 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Wed May 22 1996 12:39 | 3 |
|
The Sox are shooting for 2018 Chappy... its a 100 year rebuilding
program.
|
88.3163 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 22 1996 12:43 | 6 |
| Double A Trenton is still in 1st place in the Eastern League.
Triple A Pawtucket is back in 1st place in the International League.
Go Sox!!!
George
|
88.3164 | | NQOS01::nqsrv344.nqo.dec.com::may_br | BRUCE MAY | Wed May 22 1996 12:45 | 7 |
| > But I'm not one of the ones in here talking about the Red Sox
> "AWESOME" farm system and where there gonna be in 2-4 years either.
No, but that's all we heard from the Yankee fans in the 80's, and we're
halfway through the 90's and they've got nothing to show for it.
brews
|
88.3165 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed May 22 1996 12:49 | 5 |
|
Where? Show me where. Brewsie
I never get too excited about minor league numbers.
|
88.3166 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed May 22 1996 14:07 | 7 |
|
> I never get too excited about minor league numbers.
You should, _taken in the right light_. They're as good an estimate
of future success as major league numbers are.
Joe
|
88.3167 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Wed May 22 1996 14:23 | 3 |
|
Who's the bonus baby? My guess would be the Talyor kid the Yanks drafted. If
it's not him why isn't he at the show yet??????????
|
88.3168 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Wed May 22 1996 18:08 | 1 |
| He's probably a Georgetown red-shirt
|
88.3169 | Rocket adds to HOF resume | STRATA::GARRY | Dallas Cowboys Champs Again | Thu May 23 1996 23:54 | 15 |
| Hall Of Famer Rocket Roger Clemens will stay in Boston for his whole
career.....The guy is batting 1000 as a hitter and has 3 Cy Young's
under his belt....he will never OK a trade to any team....he is a
RED SOX legend....as a matter of fact a major league legend...imagine
a pitcher that also has the highest batting percentage possible...
this guy is a first ballot Hall of Famer....Childs and I won't say his
name for the sake of argument can only dream of having a Legend like
Roger dot their favorite teams roster..we in Boston were blessed with
him for sure in OUR lifetime....not about past history in but in OUR
lifetime.........the only other players guaranteed HOF enshrinement
today are Cal Ripken Jr and Ken Griffey Jr,...Roger is already their
but 5 years after he retires he will take number 21 with him....and to
think as a batter the guy was a 1.000 batter...name another ??????
Tom
|
88.3170 | their, they're, there | SALEM::DODA | A little too smart for a big dumb town | Fri May 24 1996 00:17 | 5 |
| For cripes sake Tom have your period key checked on your
keyboard. It seems to be sticking.
hope this helps.
daryll
|
88.3171 | and I'll be there for the induction! | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Fri May 24 1996 07:58 | 0 |
88.3172 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Fri May 24 1996 08:21 | 14 |
|
I will never say that Clemens will not be traded. I simply said he
would not be traded to Cleveland. Just don't see it happening. If fact
I'd bet on it. If Clemens goes anywhere it'd be Texas who is pitching
thin not Cleveland. I did say 6 prospects Paul but if you remember I
said only 2 would be of any real value. On a brighter side the Sox won
last night to end the home stand 6-3. On the surface not bad but when
the started 5-1 it don't look as good. Decent outing by Clemens not a
great one but got out of trouble when he had to. Didn't see the whole
thing was switching 'tween the 'Lanche/Red_ARMY_Wings game. Did get to
Rog's rope back through the box though. Wasn't a great swing he was
bailin and swept the bat but kept his head down well and had decent
weight transfer. If I where him I stick to throwin it though.
|
88.3173 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 24 1996 09:36 | 12 |
| I'm not sure how much Clemens cares about records but one reason he might
want to stay is that he's within 10 wins of the club record for wins by a Red
Sox pitcher. It would mean breaking a record currently held by Cy Young.
Then again, some players don't give a rip about those sorts of numbers so
maybe he doesn't care. Seems it would be one more factor that would be
considered when he came up for the Hall of Fame.
By the way, Clemens regular season batting average is 1.000 but it's a bit
lower if you factor in his World Series at bats from '86.
George
|
88.3174 | I was impressed... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Fri May 24 1996 10:30 | 15 |
|
> Wasn't a great swing he was
> bailin and swept the bat but kept his head down well and had decent
> weight transfer.
I don't know Jerry; I didn't see any bailing. Charlton did him a
favor by throwing three straight heaters over the plate, but on
both the first swing (on which he was just late, and fouled it off)
and on the single up the middle, Roger demonstrated pretty solid
mechanics. He looks the type who might have been considered a
"good-hitting pitcher" (like Doc Gooden) were there no designated
geek.
glenn
|
88.3175 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Fri May 24 1996 11:00 | 3 |
| Just curious, but with the DH why was he hitting?
UMDan
|
88.3176 | Even I know this one | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Fri May 24 1996 11:51 | 9 |
| According to CNN International's Teletext, Jose Canseco, who had been the
DH, went in to play left field. In that circumstance, you lose the DH for
the rest of the game.
Normally, you would have thought the Red Sox would be weakening both the
offense and the defense with that switch, but Roger came through. No word
on how Jose did in left.
Steve
|
88.3177 | | SALEM::DODA | A little too smart for a big dumb town | Fri May 24 1996 12:06 | 11 |
| I was at the game. Jose has been out there at least a few times
since Cornholio went on the Dl. Last night he let a liner that
was in the gap skip under his glove and go to the wall. He boxed
it around for awhile until O'Leary came over and picked it. Rice
was giving him a hard time coming off the field after the game
telling him that he's supposed to bend over for those.
Frankly, I don't think they lose anything with Canseco in left
over Forrest.
daryll
|
88.3178 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Fri May 24 1996 12:17 | 11 |
| >Frankly, I don't think they lose anything with Canseco in left
>over Forrest.
Damning with faint praise...
I went to a Sox game about a week ago and got to see Jose in left. The
guy looked truly bored out there - he was even down on one knee between
pitches. It's certainly not because he's reached the pinnacle of success
as a fielder.
BTW - he let one skip by him in that game, too.
|
88.3179 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Fri May 24 1996 12:50 | 17 |
|
Canseco looked very bored out there......he also played bored out
there. I was at Tuesday's game, and with men on 1st & 2nd, a lazy fly
ball was hit to LF. Canseco was almost as lazy as the fly ball (which
was close to the warning track, but he had plenty of time to get set
for the catch). He was moving backwards when he caught it, then
casually tossed the ball to Valentin while Griffey tagged and took 3rd,
and the runner on 1st tagged and took 2nd. It was DISGACEFUL. Canseco
looked surprised, like he forgot the runners were even there. I swear,
I could have held the runner at 2nd on that play, Jr. Griffey or not.
He also looked very bored between pitches, constantly taking his glove
off, standing there trying to look cool, etc.....his attitude is a
joke.
Dave
|
88.3180 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 24 1996 13:23 | 15 |
| Well I guess if you are the coach you have to think of a way from keeping
Conseco from being bored in left field.
I wonder what you could do? Yelling wouldn't help, he'd just laugh. He's
already got a lot of money.
Maybe you could have the infielders dressed like Madona ... no, that wouldn't
work, he probably wouldn't go for seeing Mo Vaughn in drag ... maybe having
Madona herself as bat girl ... no, she's expecting and probably couldn't make
it ... he likes those big white birds some people have as pets. In fact I think
he has one. Maybe they could release them over the infield every time there was
a hit.
Don't know, something should work,
George
|
88.3181 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Fri May 24 1996 13:39 | 14 |
|
In all fairness to KK the Sox were only leading 5-4 at the time
he made multiple switches to lose the DH. Once the inning was over
they were leading 9-4. Clemens told KK he wanted to pitch 9 and give
the bullpen a rest (He probably didn't want them to blow another win
for him). With all the switching Roger took over the 9th spot in the
batting order and was the 5th scheduled batter in the 8th. So the
odds were slim to none that he would have to actually bat, he can
thank Naehring and his 2 run HR.
I give Norm Charlton a lot of credit, it was a 11-4 game no reason
to embarass Roger, he threw him 3 fastballs. Unlike the Angels player
who took Cordero out at second, during a meaningless part of a blowout.
Ron
|
88.3182 | I did jump outa my recliner though | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Fri May 24 1996 13:56 | 10 |
|
If you see it again Glenn take a look on tape. He strode (is that a
word?) towards third base and was on his heals. I also noticed that he
opened his front foot, ie almost pointed it at the pitcher, doing this
you open your hips thus taking away alot of power. Don't get me wrong,
from looking at most NL pitchers hit, there are exceptions Tom Glavine
has a nice stroke, he would be a very good hitting pitcher. I do have
a fauge memory of Luis Tiant hitting in the early 70's, I'm 31 now, and
would not put Rog in that class, but he did "have a clue" up there.<
|
88.3183 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Fri May 24 1996 14:02 | 17 |
|
Canseco shouldn't be in the field, period. He's got contract
incentives for games played in the OF but he himself obviously
thinks little of them. He does have the most blatantly
lackadaisical attitude of anyone in the game, but if you
relegate him to hitting only it doesn't seem to be a problem,
and never has. Over the past week sporting that half-assed
attitude he's homered in 6 of the last 7 games. He's always
been this way, where if you keep him healthy and in the
lineup, he produces. All the more reason to keep him chained
to the bench and in some way distracted, toying with his
playthings or whatever can keep him occupied while the real
players get their uniforms dirty. He'll still produce serious
runs interspersed between playtime.
glenn
|
88.3184 | I guess Charlton wasn't intentionally grooving... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Fri May 24 1996 14:08 | 14 |
|
> I give Norm Charlton a lot of credit, it was a 11-4 game no reason
> to embarass Roger, he threw him 3 fastballs. Unlike the Angels player
> who took Cordero out at second, during a meaningless part of a blowout.
From the radio today they're saying that postgame Charlton was
somewhat angry about being "shown up". Keep in mind that a steady
diet of 90+ mph fastballs is Charlton's normal approach, though
for an inexperienced pitcher he might have wanted mix that up more
than usual. As for being "shown up", that's pretty stupid, but
Charlton has always been one of the game's biggest hotheads.
glenn
|
88.3185 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 24 1996 14:23 | 4 |
| Wasn't he up 0-2 before that last pitch? Seems most pitchers would have
thrown a breaking pitch outside of the strike zone.
George
|
88.3186 | hmmmmmm... | BSS::MENDEZ | | Fri May 24 1996 14:38 | 4 |
| -2
Wasn't Charlton one of the "nasty boys"? Can't think of the other
reliever for Reds...
|
88.3187 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Fri May 24 1996 14:43 | 20 |
|
Charlton's comments:
"It wasn't a smart move on Kennedy's part," Charlton said of letting
Clemens hit. "A complete game shouldn't be that important."
"If I can't get the fastball by him, I don't deserve to get him out,"
Charlton said. "Losing 11-4, I've got to go right after him, so I threw
all fastballs. I didn't show him anything fancy."
Personally, as far as criticisms of Kennedy go for letting Clemens
hit, I think there's a bigger problem with having Roger pitch the
9th and run his pitch count to 129 (pushing it!), than any serious
risk of injury while hitting. But not a huge deal either way,
nowhere near comparable to letting Canseco throw those 100+
warmup/game pitches while with Texas in that game in Fenway.
glenn
|
88.3188 | | SUBPAC::WHITEHAIR | Central Division Champs=Indians | Fri May 24 1996 14:52 | 16 |
|
The Rocket has fizzeled! We don't want him in Cleveland!!!
When have you ever heard of the Indians having something to do
with rockets weather loaded or duds?
Clemens can't even swing the bat anymore...he is too FAT!
I'd also make him get a hair cut and a shave!
Can't believe the Sox pay him the money they do....I saw his house
on the "E" a couple of weeks ago. I really think that if people
see how these superstars live on our money, they would shit!
W A H O O O O O !
|
88.3189 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Fri May 24 1996 14:56 | 10 |
|
> Can't believe the Sox pay him the money they do....I saw his house
> on the "E" a couple of weeks ago. I really think that if people
> see how these superstars live on our money, they would shit!
I know... and heaven forbid one of us should ever lob a rotten egg
at one of these mansions...
glenn
|
88.3190 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Fri May 24 1996 14:57 | 5 |
| > Can't believe the Sox pay him the money they do....I saw his house
> on the "E" a couple of weeks ago. I really think that if people
> see how these superstars live on our money, they would shit!
I wonder what Albert's house looks like.
|
88.3191 | | SUBPAC::WHITEHAIR | Central Division Champs=Indians | Fri May 24 1996 15:01 | 22 |
|
Hmmmm, reminds me of something that happened to me last night...
Some guy in the classified notes was selling a camper, I went
to his house last night to take a look...only problem is that
he said to go up the driveway that has two mail boxes and some
paper boxes on the same 2x4. Well.....we saw two mail boxes
and a few boxes on the ground next to them...took the driveway
up to the house which is like up in the woods. At the end of
the driveway is a camper...I pull up to the camper and get out
of the Jeep...next thing I see is this guy comming out of the
house with a shotgun in his hand and he cocks it on the porch
while asking me what I'm doing..... Aaaaaaaaaa arn't you
selling this here camper??? NO! he says.... I'm out of there!!!
Strange......
W A H O O O O O O O O ! !
|
88.3192 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 24 1996 15:05 | 8 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3186 by BSS::MENDEZ >>>
> Wasn't Charlton one of the "nasty boys"? Can't think of the other
> reliever for Reds...
There were three of them, Norm Charlton, Ron Dibble, and Randy? Meyer(s)?
George
|
88.3193 | I'd have pulled the trigger! | CNTROL::SALMON | | Fri May 24 1996 15:18 | 5 |
| re: 88.3191
You was wearing that Indians cap last night, wasn't you!
By the way, I just happen to be selling my camper...cheap! :^)
|
88.3194 | Coulda been what you were wearing. | STRATA::BTOWER | | Fri May 24 1996 15:23 | 4 |
| RE: .3191
Hey Hal, he probably saw that ridiculous Indians/Tradition/Quality
shirt and felt he should put you out of your misery8>).
|
88.3195 | | SUBPAC::WHITEHAIR | Central Division Champs=Indians | Fri May 24 1996 15:34 | 11 |
|
The funny thing about the shirt is that you couldn't get it in
Cleveland but everyone could own on here...just go to Caldore!
They also have some real nice Indian shorts too. Funny thing
is there was a rack of Boston Red Sox shirts and shorts right
next to the Indians rack....and the Indians stuff was almost gone
but the Sox stuff was bulgeing out the sides.....
W A H O O O O O O ! ! ! !
|
88.3196 | Red Sox fans don't shop at caldor's | STRATA::BTOWER | | Fri May 24 1996 16:14 | 1 |
| I hear those Indian Shorts come with the s__tstains already in em.
|
88.3197 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Fri May 24 1996 16:33 | 10 |
|
>> Funny thing is there was a rack of Boston Red Sox shirts
>> and shorts right next to the Indians rack....and the Indians
>> stuff was almost gone but the Sox stuff was bulgeing out the
>> sides.....
Get real, Hal. It couldn't just be that they stock way more
Sox stuff than Indians stuff, could it? Honestly, I haven't
seen two people on the street wearing Indians gear.
|
88.3198 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 24 1996 16:42 | 7 |
| I just got something neat but it got away. I picked up A Boston Red Sox mouse
pad at the Arsnold Mall in Watertown but Patty grabbed up up and took it to
work.
<sigh>, back to solid blue.
George
|
88.3199 | ha ha ha | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Fri May 24 1996 16:43 | 2 |
|
A Red Sox mouse pad would be great if you want to make lots of errors!
|
88.3200 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 24 1996 16:46 | 8 |
|
You know maybe you are on to something. What the Red Sox need is an
interactive baseball debugger.
Heck, errors are no problem in software, you just fix'em.
Hmmmmm,
George
|
88.3201 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Tue May 28 1996 12:06 | 10 |
| Re. Clemens hitting. The comment that confused me was Clemens saying
that "I didn't even know I was hitting until [umpire] Daryl Cousins
beckoned me over to hit".
What was the umpire doing telling him that he was do up? Batting out
of order is an out if appealed and the ump has to keep mum. But later
Clemens was quoted as saying the whole strategy was worked out earlier
between him and Kennedy.
If Lou was still in power we'd have a third version.
|
88.3202 | Duquette will do all of the above anyway, win or lose | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Jun 25 1996 11:37 | 14 |
|
> Finally speaking of stupidity is the rebuttal of that accusation
> towards Duquette that he subtely moved to crash the Redsox this year in
> order to get rid of Kennedy and sundry other remnants and bring on his
> phenoms?
I'll rebut that. Duquette hired Kennedy in the first place, and has
the power to fire him for any reason he feels like. He doesn't have
to crash the season to make it right with the owner, or the fans.
Not in Boston, where by June the previous season is long forgotten.
Don't forget that Darrell Johnson was gone by June 1976...
glenn
|
88.3203 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Jun 25 1996 12:09 | 3 |
| And Johnson had already destructed by that time courtesy of management
via the famous holdout. Bad example Glenn. Point is that Duquette
can't get rid of Kennedy if he makes the wildcard or something close.
|
88.3204 | Kennedy is toast by 1997 at the latest, regardless | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Jun 25 1996 12:13 | 11 |
|
> Point is that Duquette can't get rid of Kennedy if he makes the
> wildcard or something close.
Why not? By my observation Kennedy was one of the most unpopular
"winning" managers ever in these parts. When he's fired, who'll
send flowers (besides Jose Canseco)? And why hire him in the
first place then?
glenn
|
88.3205 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jun 25 1996 14:53 | 7 |
| Well here comes Cleveland again. Seems every time you turn around the Sox
are either playing the Indians or the Rangers.
Gordon goes today.
Maybe this time ...
George
|
88.3206 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Jun 25 1996 15:39 | 5 |
| > Gordon goes today.
> Maybe this time ...
I'd take Custer in a rematch first
|
88.3207 | still a chevy | HBAHBA::HAAS | more madness, less horror | Tue Jun 25 1996 15:54 | 4 |
| > Gordon goes today.
I'd take Earnhardt except in the super tracks and then I like Sterling
Marlin.
|
88.3208 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Wed Jun 26 1996 07:35 | 6 |
|
Gordon serves up 3 gopher balls and the Sox fall 4-0. The back to
back blasts by Murray and Manny killed 'em. Gordon walked a bunch
but wiggled outa it but made 3 to many pitches out over the plate.
Sox had a few chances but didn't cash in, same ole same ole.
|
88.3209 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Jul 01 1996 12:07 | 14 |
| Well here's a thought. It's July, 14 games separate the Red Sox and the
Yankees, Baltimore is between them and Don Zimmer is coaching the team out in
front. Sound familiar?
I wonder if years from now when people are thinking about the 1996 season if
they will will be talking about the Jeff Fry home run? I know, I know, Bucky
Dent played SS but you'd expect Valentin to hit a home run in a big game.
Also, in July of 1914 the Boston Braves were some 14 games out in dead last
place. They started a charge, won the N.L. Pennant and went on to sweep Connie
Mack's A's in the World Series.
It ain't over, GO SOX!!!
George
|
88.3210 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Mon Jul 01 1996 12:35 | 3 |
|
Always a dreamer George... the Sox eliminated themselves in the first
10 games of the season.
|
88.3211 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Mon Jul 01 1996 12:46 | 8 |
| They eliminated themselves the day they released Alicea and elected to
start the season with Cordero. They trumped it by trying to play with
Hosey in centerfield. Overlooking the fact that their new catcher
didn't do anything with baserunners and quickly left their ace seeking
the incumbent second stringer as his personal catcher left the middle
defense in chaos.
Groaner, btw, what do you think of Dan Duquette?
|
88.3212 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Jul 01 1996 12:46 | 8 |
|
The sox lowered their probability of winning in the 1st 10 games of the
season just as the '14 Braves and '78 Yankees reduced their chances of winning
in the 1st half of the season.
That's different from a team eliminating themselves.
George
|
88.3213 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Jul 01 1996 12:50 | 12 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3211 by MKOTS3::BREEN >>>
> They eliminated themselves the day they released Alicea and elected to
> start the season with Cordero. They trumped it by trying to play with
> Hosey in centerfield.
I know you keep telling us that but then why didn't they start winning like
last year when they picked up Fry who's done an outstanding job at 2nd base
and Tinsley who was the guy out in Centerfield last year? Except for the
catcher this is last year's defensive team. Now do we blame it all on Stanley?
George
|
88.3214 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Mon Jul 01 1996 12:52 | 22 |
|
Call it what you want George, you're a dreamer. They're done.
DanD has done a good job rebuilding the minor league team. I think he
is doing an "okay" job with the major league club. The team is
definitely underperforming (choking) this year.
A couple of comments on stuff I heard on the radio this past weekend.
I think it was the thursday or friday game, that was delayed by rain,
so they had the Sox Phone in show. Some idiot calls in and says the
Sox should make 3-4 deals and he lists them. The on that really got
me was Nomar for Andruw Jones. No way does Atlanta deal Jones, even
for Nomar.
Secondly, during the Orioles-Yankees game (1st game of series I think),
the announcer was ragging on Alomar for bunting early in the game with
a runner on first and no outs. He said that it was stupid for the #3
hitter to be bunting. Next batter gets a base hit and the runner
Alomar moved over scored. He didn't mention again, how stupid it was
to bunt the runner over.
|
88.3215 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Jul 01 1996 13:11 | 22 |
|
Biggest difference between the 78 Yanks and the 96 Red Sox....
TALENT!!!!!
Guidry > Clemens
Reggie > Canseco
Rivers > Tinsley
Goose > Slocum
Nettles > Naehring
Randolph > Frye
Figueroa > Gordon
May > Wakefield
Lou > O'Leary
And on and on!!!!
|
88.3216 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Mon Jul 01 1996 13:27 | 16 |
|
For starters the Sox are only 13 games behind the Yankees, not the
mentioned 14.
Last season the Yankees were 61-61 on September 6th, 15.5 games
behind the Red Sox. Yet finished 18-4, to end 79-65 which got them the
wild card spot. I don't believe the Sox will catch the Yankees or
the White Sox for the wild card spot. Since they are 11 games behind
the White Sox for the wild card. The Red Sox would have to make up
6/7 games in July or they are all done. If they don't DD, will make
trades to contending teams to beat the July 31st interleague trading
deadline. Then more trades by Auguest 31st for league trades.
Since the 0-11 start of the season, the Red Sox have been playing
just as good as the Yankees. They dug a whole too deep to get out of
with this current team.
Ron
|
88.3217 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Jul 01 1996 13:39 | 28 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3215 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> Biggest difference between the 78 Yanks and the 96 Red Sox....
> TALENT!!!!!
> Guidry > Clemens
> Reggie > Canseco
> Rivers > Tinsley
> Goose > Slocum
> Nettles > Naehring
> Randolph > Frye
> Figueroa > Gordon
> May > Wakefield
> Lou > O'Leary
I'm not sure you've lined that up quite right. On offense Mo should line up
with Reggie. Was Munson on that team? Seems he should line up with Canseco.
That would be about even.
Also, I don't agree with Nettles being better than Naehring. True he had
those great World Series games once they got back to New York but are you sure
he was better than Naehring during the season?
And of course you left out
Dent < Valentin
George
|
88.3218 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Jul 01 1996 14:21 | 18 |
|
> Secondly, during the Orioles-Yankees game (1st game of series I think),
> the announcer was ragging on Alomar for bunting early in the game with
> a runner on first and no outs. He said that it was stupid for the #3
> hitter to be bunting. Next batter gets a base hit and the runner
> Alomar moved over scored. He didn't mention again, how stupid it was
> to bunt the runner over.
You didn't comment on what occured, so I will...
The announcer was absolutely correct. Bunting in that situation with
anything resembling a hitter (not to mention Alomar) is idiotic,
_particularly_ given the offensive levels of the AL this year.
While the odds of scoring one run goes up slightly, the odds of
scoring multiple runs goes down significantly. If Alomar's up,
it's not even clear that the odds of scoring one run goes up...
Joe
|
88.3219 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Jul 01 1996 15:04 | 22 |
|
I'd take Bucky's D over Valentin's any day. Plus he did have a
pretty clutch homerun.
I was lining them up defensively.
But BTW.
Munson >>>>> Stanley
Moe > Chambliss
Jefferson (is that whos in LF this week) > Oscar Gamble.
But if you wanna put Moe Vs Reggie. Check out their PostSeason
stats Georgie.
You must have been watching the Milwaukee Braves or something
back than George. Because Nettles was definitely >>> than Naehring.
Isn't Timmy due to go down with "SOME" injury soon??
Chap
|
88.3220 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Mon Jul 01 1996 15:20 | 4 |
|
How come Yappy's not been flapping his lip in the Yankmees note... did
the O's do a wax job on them this weekend or something?
|
88.3221 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Jul 01 1996 15:54 | 17 |
|
I'd be curious to see what Nettels numbers were in '78 but Tim Naehring is
having one heck of a season. If Nettels had a year way better than this he
should be in the hall of fame.
Name Rc Rcg gms avr Ab Ht Hr Tb Sb BB So
Tim Naehring 41.558 8.905 53 0.335 188 63 11 102 1 24 23
A Runs Created per game of almost 9 runs is about as good as anyone gets and
his defense lately has reminded me a lot of those 2 plays Nettels made around
games 3 and 4 of the World Series.
As for Mo and the post season, it's hard to tell. He was only in 3 post
season games. Remember how the Yankees shut down Garvey in '78 but got pounded
by him in '81? One slump does not mean the guy won't come back next time.
George
|
88.3222 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Mon Jul 01 1996 16:18 | 3 |
|
Its Nettles not Nettels! and get off the James RC numbers - they are
not the end all stats!
|
88.3223 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Jul 01 1996 16:33 | 13 |
|
Not to mention in 78 the ball wasn't juiced like it is now. If so
Reggie would have hit 65. And one weekend does not a 3Baseman make. Did
you see any of his errors this year George? Pretty weak.
You call 2-2 a smoke show by the O's Groaner??? What would that be
than if you got beat 4 straight at home? (Hypothetically of course)
Chap
|
88.3224 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Jul 01 1996 17:00 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3223 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> Not to mention in 78 the ball wasn't juiced like it is now. If so
> Reggie would have hit 65. And one weekend does not a 3Baseman make. Did
> you see any of his errors this year George? Pretty weak.
Tim Naehring did a decent job defensively at 3rd last year and is doing a
really good job this year in spite of having just been moved there from 2nd
base. He should get better as the season goes along.
In any case, your comparison of this Red Sox team to the '78 Yankees may be
interesting but it has nothing to do with a potential BoSox come back this
season. They don't have to beat the '78 Yankees, all they have to do is beat
the '96 Yankees, a much easier task.
George
|
88.3225 | Enuff said (or is it enoff??) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Jul 01 1996 17:12 | 7 |
|
78 Yankees > 96 Yankees > 78 Red Sox > 96 Red Sox
Chap
|
88.3226 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Jul 01 1996 17:27 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3225 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> 78 Yankees > 96 Yankees > 78 Red Sox > 96 Red Sox
78 Yankees = 78 Red Sox >>>> 96 Yankees >(*) 96 Red Sox
* as long as Yankee fairy god mother dust and Red Sox jinx holds out.
> -< Enuff said (or is it enoff??) >-
Nuf Ced,
George
|
88.3227 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Mon Jul 01 1996 17:30 | 15 |
|
Naehring has 6 errors on the season in 59 games. I think he
had two bad games in the beginning of the season where he committed
4 errors in 2 games.
I'd like to see Naehring go to the All-Star game for the fact that
someone already mentioned. He was moved to 3B last season and everybody
was worried about his defense. He has turned out to be a better 3B,
then he ever was at SS or 3B. Plus, he has been playing well for
1.5 years now, with limited injurys. He isn't just having a 1st hot
half of the season.
I personally thank players should get selected to this years All-
Star game. If they had a good season last year, and are having a good
season this year. So you avoid the 3 month hot streak players.
Ron
|
88.3228 | one word - LOSER! | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 08:43 | 2 |
|
Clemens slapped silly again.
|
88.3229 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 02 1996 09:47 | 14 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3228 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> Clemens slapped silly again.
Well not exactly. Take a closer look:
Boston ip h r er bb so hr era
Clemens (L, 3-7) 7 4 2 1 7 1 1 4.02
About the only thing he did wrong was walking his old friend Wade Boggs
4 times. Even then one of the walks was intentional. I'm looking but I don't
see any slapping.
George
|
88.3230 | loser | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 10:07 | 5 |
|
Nice strikeout to walk ratio there...! Boston will be lucky to get
someone 25 year old semi-prospect and a journeyman 2B for Clemens
when they try to trade him after the all-star break.
|
88.3231 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 02 1996 10:10 | 13 |
|
George are you saying 78 Yankees = 78 Red Sox??? Ah you wanna check
there ring fingers??? And as far as that goes the 96 Yanks will be in
the playoffs something the 78 Red Sux never were.
Roger pitched good last night. Jimmy Key just pitched better.
Surprised your not bitching about the strike zone yet Georgie.
Chap
|
88.3232 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 02 1996 10:42 | 24 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3231 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> George are you saying 78 Yankees = 78 Red Sox??? Ah you wanna check
> there ring fingers??? And as far as that goes the 96 Yanks will be in
> the playoffs something the 78 Red Sux never were.
Yes. Winning championships means little if anything when it comes to picking
the better team. When a team wins a championship series all that means is that
they played better than the other team, not that they are better than the other
team. Good teams play bad games and bad teams play good games all the time.
Take for example the '88 World Series. Everyone including the Dodgers
management agreed that the A's were a better team than the Dodgers but the
Dodgers played better during the World Series and won.
The Red Sox and Yankees spent the entire season demonstrating that they were
so closely matched that they were about the same. A one game playoff in
baseball proves nothing, it only selects which of two equal teams gets the
privilege of advancing.
Why do you think they have that saying "May the better team win"? It's
because the better team doesn't always win.
George
|
88.3233 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 11:14 | 3 |
|
Using GM#1, the 1995 Indians were better than the 1995 Braves. Please
note this is based on data from George, so it must be so.
|
88.3234 | Boston always shoots low - .501 winning percentage = winning team | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 11:39 | 6 |
|
I almost fell off my seat laughing last night when they interviewed Tom
Gordon on the radio pregame. They asked if Gordon felt extra pressure
coming to Boston where "winning is a tradition". Um, I guess if you
define winning other than *WINNING* WS Championships, this may be a
valid statement.
|
88.3235 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 02 1996 11:48 | 12 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3233 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> Using GM#1, the 1995 Indians were better than the 1995 Braves. Please
> note this is based on data from George, so it must be so.
No, using GM#1 there is no evidence to tell one way or the other if the
'95 Braves were better than the '95 Indians. The close 6 games series seemed
to hint that they were evenly matched but it's short length and the lack of
other common opponents proved little if anything as to which was the better
team.
George
|
88.3236 | George's World special | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Jul 02 1996 11:49 | 4 |
88.3237 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 02 1996 11:56 | 18 |
| Yes that's exactly right. You can't stomach reading any more as opposed to
saying you disagree and here is the reason why.
That's because the notion that one inning of one championship baseball game
can prove who is the better team is a romantic notion with emotional appeal but
has very little basis in reality. My statement is like saying the Emperor has
no cloths, you know it's right but you just don't want to hear it because it
spoils the illusion.
Luck plays a large part in sports and it plays a huge part in baseball. Where
we would like to think championships determine who is the better team of two
or the best team in a league in reality they only determine who played a better
game or series.
Worse teams beat better teams all the time. That's why we have the saying
"May the better team win".
George
|
88.3238 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 02 1996 13:14 | 10 |
|
George you are unbelievable. Does it Rain in your world? Why do
they play baseball then?
Georges Logic!!! Red Sox are the best team of all time, they
just get screwed in the "Big Inning".
chap
|
88.3239 | Fantasy land = Boston Red Sox | BIGQ::WEST | Kevin 225-4528 HLO | Tue Jul 02 1996 13:24 | 8 |
|
Chap, is that what you got from Georges logic......
What I got is that he's just a Red Sox believer living in a
fantasy world or he just doesn't know anything about baseball!!
/westy
|
88.3240 | | SALEM::DODA | A little too smart for a big dumb town | Tue Jul 02 1996 13:43 | 4 |
| It's sad to see a major league chain yanking going on when the
"yankee" is too clueless to notice...
daryll
|
88.3241 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 02 1996 13:59 | 24 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3238 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> Georges Logic!!! Red Sox are the best team of all time, they
> just get screwed in the "Big Inning".
Show me where I ever said the Red Sox are the best team of all time.
> George you are unbelievable. Does it Rain in your world? Why do
> they play baseball then?
Baseball is a game played on a professional level for the entertainment of
baseball fans. It's a chance to see the best players go head to head at a game
that many of us love to watch. In return the owners and players get paid for
their efforts.
The schedules are arranged and stats are kept in such a way that there is
not only the immediate contest but a multi game competition leading up to
playoffs after which one team emerges as a champion.
That team may be the best team or that team may be a good team that made
the playoffs and played better than the other teams ending up as Champion
as the Dodgers did in '88.
George
|
88.3242 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 14:02 | 5 |
|
> It's a chance to see the best players..
Can you prove this?
|
88.3243 | Alot of stars in the AL | BIGQ::WEST | Kevin 225-4528 HLO | Tue Jul 02 1996 14:07 | 6 |
|
Didn't that just happen when the Yankees played the Indians??
Or is it when Atlanta plays Montreal?? Seattle vs Texas???
Nope its the All-Star game.........
|
88.3244 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 14:18 | 3 |
|
# of stars in AL >> # of stars in other so called ML (NL)
|
88.3245 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Jul 02 1996 14:30 | 40 |
|
> # of stars in AL >> # of stars in other so called ML (NL)
Actually, there's a lot to this, particularly when it comes to
young stars and star in their prime.
The AL has the following clear-cut "stars":
Robby Alomar
Cal Ripken
Mo Vaughn
Jose Canseco
Roger Clemens
Cecil Fielder
Wade Boggs
Dwight Gooden
David Cone
Joe Carter
Frank Thomas
Albert Belle
Kenny Lofton
Eddie Murray
Jack McDowell
Kevin Appier
Kirby Puckett
Mark McGwire
Ken Griffey
Randy Johnson
Juan Gonzalez
Will Clark
Ivan Rodriguez
Plus a lot of borderline stars (Palmiero, Baerga, Salmon, and Knoblauch
come to mind) and a number of rising stars (Edmonds, Rodriguez, Thome).
The NL, particularly once you get past Atlanta, doesn't seem to have
nearly as many, though I'm sure _some_ of that is my skewed perception,
being in an AL city.
Joe
|
88.3246 | Oh no, there's two of them! | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Jul 02 1996 14:32 | 11 |
| George Sisler (HoF) wrote a book on baseball in the 50s and like others
chose three all time "best" teams. He chose the 27 Yankees, one of the
Athletic teams and for his third choice took the 1950 Brooklyn Dodgers.
This was quite a pick in that not only didn't the bums win the world
series that year they lost the pennant to the Philadelphia Whiz Kid
Phillies. George must have been blinded by the number of stars, many
future hall of famers on that team led by the magnificent Robinson at
his peak.
Sisler was obviously every bit as nutty as our own George.
|
88.3247 | the Madness of George | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Jul 02 1996 14:34 | 1 |
88.3248 | George logic excluded | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Jul 02 1996 14:37 | 7 |
88.3249 | 'nuff said | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 14:40 | 2 |
|
What's Atlanta's record in the WS in the 90's?
|
88.3250 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Jul 02 1996 14:44 | 4 |
|
It's the same as Atlanta's all-time WS record...
Joe
|
88.3251 | 0-fer | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Tue Jul 02 1996 15:04 | 3 |
| What's Clevelands WS Record in the 90's?
UMDan
|
88.3252 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 15:16 | 4 |
|
Does anyone have a list of the WS winners from 1980->1995
|
88.3253 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 02 1996 15:42 | 25 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3252 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> Does anyone have a list of the WS winners from 1980->1995
Let's See, if I remember right:
1980 Phillie over K.C.
1981 Strike year. Dodgers beat Yankees in 6 as Garvey comes alive.
1982 Cards beat Brewers in "yuck" series, Harvy Kean spit every chew on TV.
1983 Baltimore beats Phillie after beating 20 game leading White Sox in ALCS.
1984 Detroit over S.D. in the "Who did you say made the World Series" series.
1985 K.C. beats Cards. Jack Clark drops ball in game 6, Saberhagen in game 7.
1986 Mets over BoSox. Bucker, Game 6, etc.
1987 Twins over Cards in 7, home team wins every game.
1988 Dodgers beat the A's who everyone agrees is a better team.
1989 Bay series rocked by earth quake. A's beat Giants in 4.
1990 A's swept by Reds in 4.
1991 Twins over Braves in 7, home team wins every game again. 10th inning win.
1992 Toronto beats Braves.
1993 Toronto beats Phillies.
1994 Strike
1995 Braves beat Indians in 6.
George
|
88.3254 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 16:05 | 3 |
|
So the NL has won once in the 90s... looks like AL domination to me.
|
88.3255 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Tue Jul 02 1996 17:07 | 6 |
|
Paul, re-read the note again, It says 1990 "A's swept by the Reds". The
Reds won in 90 and Atlanta in 95, so that is twice. So the AL is up
3-2 in the 90's.
Ron
|
88.3256 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 17:25 | 3 |
|
Ron, you can't count 1990 for the NL (GM#1 - everyone knows the A's
were the better team), so its 4-1 AL in the 90's.
|
88.3257 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 02 1996 17:49 | 17 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3256 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> Ron, you can't count 1990 for the NL (GM#1 - everyone knows the A's
> were the better team), so its 4-1 AL in the 90's.
You are flailing Paul. Grasping at straws.
Where did I ever say everyone knows the A's were better than the Reds?
In '88 Tommy Lasorta himself admitted that the A's were better than the
Dodgers but I never heard anyone say, never mind everyone agree, that 2 years
later the A's were better than the Reds.
So far you are doing a rather good job of disproving your own theory about
excuses.
George
|
88.3258 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 02 1996 17:55 | 2 |
|
You're right, what am I thinking, the hometown Reds were better.
|
88.3259 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 02 1996 18:00 | 9 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3258 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI >>>
> You're right, what am I thinking, the hometown Reds were better.
A 4-0 sweep is certainly a good piece of evidence that a team is better than
the other but it's still not conclusive. Even if teams are perfectly matched
there is a 1 in 8 chance of a sweep one way or the other.
George
|
88.3260 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Jul 02 1996 19:51 | 3 |
88.3261 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed Jul 03 1996 10:08 | 8 |
|
In 1976 Pete Rose admitted that the Yanks were a better team but the
Reds just got lucky in that 4 game sweep of us.
Chap
|
88.3262 | Not I! said the canary... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Jul 08 1996 12:48 | 7 |
|
Seems that F.Rodriguez (8) and Eric Hanson (9) have the same amount
of wins as Roger, Flash,Wakefield and Sele.
Who woulda thunk it.
|
88.3263 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 09 1996 10:14 | 5 |
|
Clemens is 3-8, compare that winning percentage to the winning
percentage of the team and you'll know why Roger called Boston
Losersville, USA and word now is that his agent is working directly
with Cleveland to work out a long term deal before the tradee.
|
88.3264 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Tue Jul 09 1996 10:53 | 2 |
| Amazing, Groaner. If someone put a truth filter on your notes, there'd
be nothing left but articles and prepositions...
|
88.3265 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Jul 09 1996 11:11 | 7 |
| Roland you may want to be kind to poor Paul. His beloved Tribe who he
thought was invincible in the A.L. at least is not only in deep
sneakers in the Central but far from a lock for the wildcard. Starting
Pitching, the prospects furthur away than hoped for, dissension,
injuries, the collapse of Mesa...
Have you no sympathy for the poor man
|
88.3266 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Tue Jul 09 1996 11:27 | 5 |
| That would also explain the disappearance (AGAIN) of Hal.
billl
|
88.3267 | A bit o Trivia..... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 09 1996 13:07 | 13 |
|
Ellis Burks, Jeff Bagwell and Brady Anderson were all in the
Home Run derby last night.
Care to guess what else they had in common.
Hint...... Boddicker (sp) and Anderson.
Chap
|
88.3268 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Tue Jul 09 1996 13:28 | 1 |
| Wasn't Curt Schilling part of the Boddicker deal as well?
|
88.3269 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 09 1996 13:48 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3267 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> Ellis Burks, Jeff Bagwell and Brady Anderson were all in the
> Home Run derby last night.
> Care to guess what else they had in common.
Yeh, They all lost to Barry Bonds. In fact none of them made the last round.
Now I'm not sure that in itself means anything, do you?
:*)}
George
|
88.3270 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Tue Jul 09 1996 14:09 | 13 |
| Does anyone know how the contestents of the HRD are selected?
I was suprized to not see Mo Vaughn there.
----
on a side note...
Was Barry Bonds _really_ the best home run hitter yesterday
or was he _really_ an also ran who got lucky?
Inquiring minds,
billl
|
88.3271 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 09 1996 14:28 | 8 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3270 by MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long "Beat em Bucs" >>>
>Was Barry Bonds _really_ the best home run hitter yesterday
>or was he _really_ an also ran who got lucky?
There was not enough information from that one contest to know either way.
George
|
88.3272 | lucky for you... | SALEM::DODA | A little too smart for a big dumb town | Tue Jul 09 1996 14:37 | 0 |
88.3273 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 09 1996 14:50 | 8 |
|
Yes Schilling went with Brady for Boddicker. BTW Boddicker helped
them win the AL East that year and than lost to the A's. But they were
the best team they just lost to a luckier team that day.
Chap
|
88.3274 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Tue Jul 09 1996 15:53 | 4 |
| Mo chose not to participate due to his finger injury. I will predict
a dinger in his only at-bat tonight though..........
IMJIMBO
|
88.3275 | 2 injuries and 1 wimp | FABSIX::R_LUCHT | Ten Feet Tall and Bulletproof | Tue Jul 09 1996 21:51 | 8 |
| Yeah ,
Mo and Frank Thomas both declined due to injuries, Fat Albert declined
because he knew he'd lose.
They all would have had trouble with Bonds though, he was in a zone and
won with relative ease.
Rich.........
|
88.3276 | stir baby | MFGFIN::JACKSON | Set the drag just right! | Tue Jul 09 1996 22:59 | 7 |
| re-1
Since Bonds was in a zone and won the the derby, that means he's not
the best, he's just the champion ;-)))
Tim
|
88.3277 | Fatboys are back | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Jul 16 1996 11:06 | 17 |
| <<< Note 88.2 by CAMONE::WAY "Cheez-Whiz, Choice of Champions">>>
>Well, I, for one, think that there will always be a place in the Majors
>for a team with old, slow players.
Well 'Saw's timeless description of the Sox ties in this morning. The
old, slow players are back from vacation along with some badly needed
middle relief pitchers. The team finally found an identity through a
shored up outfield defense (sauf Jefferson but left field was never
strong defensively and Reggie's bat has made a big difference) and
solid infield play. Malaave has been a very nice addition.
Now it's all going to hell. Jefferson's bat will be dormant while
Greenwell returns and incredibly Mitchell seems slated for Rightfield.
On the heels of this will come Cordero looking for a place to play.
Just when there was some hope for this team.
|
88.3278 | This train is going nowhere... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Jul 16 1996 12:14 | 25 |
|
> Well 'Saw's timeless description of the Sox ties in this morning. The
> old, slow players are back from vacation along with some badly needed
> middle relief pitchers. The team finally found an identity through a
> shored up outfield defense (sauf Jefferson but left field was never
> strong defensively and Reggie's bat has made a big difference) and
> solid infield play. Malaave has been a very nice addition.
A little mini-streak coming mostly against the older, slower Detroit
Tigers and suddenly the Sox have a_identity, huh, billte? I'll grant
you that the slightly younger, slow Reggie Jefferson has made a
difference with the bat but the outfield D is still very mediocre.
As long as Troy O'Leary is still getting playing time, there'll be
a place for the Mike Greenwells and Kevin Mitchells of the world,
and certainly Wil Cordero's bat. Malave has also done very little...
Another guy who has put in a major-league-caliber effort defensively
is Jeff Frye (in spite of one very bad, costly error last week). So
much for the idea that a decent CF and 2B would turn this sorry excuse
for a pitching staff back into pennant material, though (fortunately
that kid the Yanks sent out there last night was throwing a better
brand of BP than Tim Wakefield...)
glenn
|
88.3279 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Jul 16 1996 12:33 | 17 |
| My mom could pitch better than most of the Red Sox staff.
Still, as a Sox fan, I couldn't help but enjoy last night's victory over the
Yankees.
Despite all the crap that gets slung around in this file, the barbs, and all
that juvenile stuff, I still enjoy watching a Sox game, especially a victory.
They're not going anywhere this year. I think Kennedy is overrated (slightly)
and despite Wakefield's post game comments last night, they're not making
a run at all, don't be fooled.
But, a summer evening, with a nice breeze coming in from outside, my feet up,
and a good baseball game....well, I'll take it any day.
'Saw
|
88.3280 | It's delusion... ;-) | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Jul 16 1996 12:37 | 9 |
|
> But, a summer evening, with a nice breeze coming in from outside, my feet up,
> and a good baseball game....well, I'll take it any day.
And if you hadn't quit drinking, you'd have developed a case of
pennant fever... at least till the morning... ;-)
glenn
|
88.3281 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Jul 16 1996 12:56 | 10 |
| >
> And if you hadn't quit drinking, you'd have developed a case of
> pennant fever... at least till the morning... ;-)
>
Well, there's numerous reasons why I jumped my old propbutt up on that
particular bandwagon. One of themn was that my delusions were becoming better
than my reality. 8^)
|
88.3282 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Jul 16 1996 13:05 | 19 |
| Wrong Glenn, this team was playing better before the all star break.
O'Leary is not Kaline but is closer to Al than Mitchell or Canseco is
to O'Leary. Malaave can play right field and Tinsley is more than
adequate and again compared to Hosey is Dominic DiMaggio.
Frye is a fully competent second baseman that which every serious
GM/Manager in baseball knows is an absolute necessity except for the
clueless Sox hierarchy. Alicea I see is still making errors and is
occasionally benched for Gallego. He's an FSU product - where'd Irvin
(not Monte) matriculate?
One thing the Duquette/Kennedy experiments proved conclusively is the
imporatance to a team of the key defensive positions and overall
outfield defense and that pitching is much more of a constant than
generally thought. The variable proved to be defense which resulted in
high ERAs (errors perse being only one part of the equation).
All the Gordons and Seles ever needed were a few defensive plays behind
them.
|
88.3283 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Tue Jul 16 1996 13:26 | 9 |
| >Alicea I see is still making errors and is
> occasionally benched for Gallego. He's an FSU product - where'd Irvin
> (not Monte) matriculate?
Billte emerges from behind a grassy knoll with a bag of cocaine and
Michael Irvin and Luis Alicea in handcuffs.
If you're talking about Michael Irvin, he's from Miami, that noted bastion
of sainthood, aka The University of Nebraska at Miami...
|
88.3284 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Jul 16 1996 14:42 | 9 |
| No the allusion is to the question "What's wrong with Alicea?". When a
player of his caliber makes a bunch of easy errors the question
comes up: "What's his problem?". Add to this Dan Duquette's preference
of ruining his baseball team to get rid of him...
Ironically in this drug subject my personal anger is in the
unpredictability it brings into sports. I'd be able to wear that
Bruins hat that's going to K.Derry if it wasn't for the unreported drug
use on those teams I picked to win last year.
|
88.3285 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Jul 16 1996 16:13 | 12 |
|
> No the allusion is to the question "What's wrong with Alicea?". When a
> player of his caliber makes a bunch of easy errors the question
> comes up: "What's his problem?"
Answer: he's not that good, never has been, and never will be.
Several teams have managed to win pennants without him, even, and
the pent-up demand for Luis Alicea's services has yet to be truly
realized on the open market...
glenn
|
88.3286 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Wed Jul 17 1996 08:17 | 2 |
|
Still think he's a HOF lock, Glenn et. all???????????
|
88.3287 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Jul 17 1996 09:16 | 10 |
|
> Still think he's a HOF lock, Glenn et. all???????????
Clemens? No less so than he was before this season. For Clemens
_not_ to make the HoF, he's going to have to pitch poorly for a few
year (i.e., worse than he's pitched recently), starting very soon
now, and then retire. Otherwise, his cumulative accomplishments
will push him in.
Joe
|
88.3288 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Wed Jul 17 1996 09:29 | 3 |
| Who else Joe? When's the last time he won 20 or even 15???????
mike
|
88.3289 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Jul 17 1996 11:05 | 4 |
|
I'm not sure w.r.t. 20; he last won 15 (18, actually) in 1992.
Joe
|
88.3290 | Tiant > Clemens | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Ain't no one gonna dog me down | Wed Jul 17 1996 15:15 | 5 |
| As of right now, there is NO WAY Clemens belongs in the Hall. Just
compare his numbers with Luis Tiant, and then tell me who has been the
best Red Sox pitcher over the last 25 years.
NAZZ
|
88.3291 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Wed Jul 17 1996 17:15 | 6 |
| I liked Tiant but Clemens is the best RedSox pitcher at least since the
war. But if there is sincere doubt about his HoF credentials then
Clemens needs to get to a club that can play team defense and make
plays in the clutch.
It's not run support that's killing Clemens it's defense.
|
88.3292 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Wed Jul 17 1996 17:18 | 3 |
|
Um... Luis Tiant was an Indians pitcher who got stuck playing with the
Red Sox for a while, not vice versa.
|
88.3293 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed Jul 17 1996 17:36 | 8 |
|
> It's not run support that's killing Clemens it's defense.
It's both. Nine of his starts Sox have scored two runs or less;
in this day and age that's like being shut out...
glenn
|
88.3294 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed Jul 17 1996 17:42 | 14 |
|
It wouldn't be. You give him a 3 run lead than he proceeds to walk
two batters with two outs and gives up hits to such stalwarts as Matt
Howard, Andy Fox and Derek Jeter.
Clemens will get into the HOF because he was the most dominating
pitcher of his Era. But you guys have to mee me half way here. He is
just nowhere as good as he use to be. He is now very hittable and he
tries to pick corners too much now.
Chap
|
88.3295 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed Jul 17 1996 17:54 | 20 |
|
> Clemens will get into the HOF because he was the most dominating
> pitcher of his Era. But you guys have to mee me half way here. He is
> just nowhere as good as he use to be.
That's pretty obvious. But at 34 who is as good as he used to be?
He still hasn't lost it; the strikeouts attest to that. I agree
with billte, the best possible thing for Clemens' career personally,
for the near foreseeable future (actually since like, 1991) would be
to get the hell out of Boston, where he could still be posting 15-win
seasons just based on the performances we're seeing right now.
Clemens has to get a lot worse than he is right now, for a prolonged
period, to miss out on the Hall of Fame. The metrics for pitching
careers have changed drastically since even the 1970s. Once he nails
down that 200th win (at this rate, pitching for the Sox, maybe
sometime in the next century ;-), it's a walk.
glenn
|
88.3296 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Wed Jul 17 1996 17:56 | 3 |
|
Clemens would win 20 games in Cleveland... his attitude would be much
better and he'd be pitching for the best team in baseball.
|
88.3297 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Thu Jul 18 1996 09:28 | 8 |
|
I dont think Clemens winning 200 will be a lock in the HOF. Don Sutton
never made it to the HOF and I believe he won 300.
Speaking of HOF, everyone says that Ozzie Smith will make it with ease.
I do not understand that either since Mazeroski never got voted in. Maz
and Smith has great defense skills and I believe Maz's offense numbers
were very comparable or better than Smith's.
|
88.3298 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Thu Jul 18 1996 09:29 | 11 |
| Interesting game last evening.
I had been watching it off and on all evening whilst doing laundry and starting
to get my equipment ready for our active duty summer encampment.
Channel surfed just after Jose's towering blast (no pun intended) and was
riveted by the reports of the TWA air disaster. Found out afterwards that it
was quite a game with two big comebacks....
'Saw
|
88.3299 | | TRIBE::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Jul 18 1996 12:46 | 11 |
|
Sutton _will_ make it to the HoF, though (as will Niekro).
w.r.t. Smith, I believe Smith had a longer career, which weighs
in his favor - and gives him more impressive cumulative totals,
particularly w.r.t. basestealing. Plus Smith plays SS, which in
HoF terms is a plus vs. Mazeroski. Personally, I'd induct them
both.
Joe
|
88.3300 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Thu Jul 18 1996 13:43 | 9 |
| >> w.r.t. Smith, I believe Smith had a longer career, which weighs
>> in his favor - and gives him more impressive cumulative totals,
>> particularly w.r.t. basestealing. Plus Smith plays SS, which in
>> HoF terms is a plus vs. Mazeroski. Personally, I'd induct them
>> both.
I *think* Maz exceeds Smith in every Offense category except
Stolen Bases.
|
88.3301 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Jul 18 1996 14:03 | 5 |
|
Even career categories? I would have sworn Ozzie had more hits
and doubles...
Joe
|
88.3302 | Tiant's numbers speak for themselves | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Ain't no one gonna dog me down | Thu Jul 18 1996 16:15 | 10 |
| Here are Tiant's stats. I'd love to see Clemens' career stats and
compare the two.
YRS W L PCT ERA G CG IP H SO Shutouts
Tiant 19 229 172 .571 3.30 573 187 3485 3075 2416 49
In the post-season, Tiant is 3-0 with a 2.75 ERA. two of his three
starts were complete games; one was a shutout.
NAZZ
|
88.3303 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Thu Jul 18 1996 16:27 | 4 |
| >Tiant's numbers speak for themselves
I'm glad his numbers speak for themselves, 'cause I sure as hell can't
understand him when he talks... :-)
|
88.3304 | cool WWW page | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Jul 18 1996 17:35 | 1 |
88.3305 | | POWDML::GARBARINO | | Wed Jul 31 1996 11:34 | 8 |
| I've heard Dan Duquette say at least twice since the weekend that the
club with the player has the advantage when talking trade right before
this deadline. Are we to believe that he only got Bragg for Moyer and
some unknown minor league 2B for Mitchell because of his power-position ?
Beware of this guy Red Sox fans. Me thinks he talks out of both sides
of his mouth (previous comments re: building with youth while stocking
the ML team with over-paid vets as further evidence).
|
88.3306 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Jul 31 1996 11:43 | 4 |
|
Um, Joe, Bragg is quite a good pickup for Moyer...
Joe
|
88.3307 | Good trades | ILBBAK::SILVESTRI | Soar with the Eagles! | Wed Jul 31 1996 11:57 | 30 |
| >> I've heard Dan Duquette say at least twice since the weekend that the
>> club with the player has the advantage when talking trade right before
>> this deadline. Are we to believe that he only got Bragg for Moyer and
>> some unknown minor league 2B for Mitchell because of his power-position ?
Lets see ... so far this month he has dumped Manto, Mitchell
and Moyer ... three inexpensive free agents he picked up during
the off season or during this season ... in return he grabbed
two young infielders, a young outfielder and a pitching prospect ...
None of the guys he jettisoned were in any of the Red Sox plans
for the future ... it looks to me like Duquette did a great job,
he got rid of some marginal players for some prospects, even if
the prospects don't pan out, he made the right choice ...
>> Beware of this guy Red Sox fans. Me thinks he talks out of both sides
>> of his mouth (previous comments re: building with youth while stocking
>> the ML team with over-paid vets as further evidence).
He *is* building the minor league system, but that takes YEARS ...
While he is waiting for the farm system to start producing players
he adds a few veterans to the major league roster to keep the
team somewhat competitive ... it worked last year when lightning
struck, but not this year ... look at the Sox payroll now compared
to the Gorman years, look at the minor league teams now compared to the
Gorman years ... I like what Duquette is doing and will show some
patience ...
Vinny
|
88.3308 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed Jul 31 1996 11:57 | 8 |
|
> Um, Joe, Bragg is quite a good pickup for Moyer...
And Kevin Mitchell is virtually worthless in a trade; no surprise
there...
glenn
|
88.3309 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Wed Jul 31 1996 12:33 | 6 |
|
Face the facts, last year was a fluke. DD is trying to keep the
Sox competitive to keep Fenway reasonable full of fans, until the
next group of youngsters are ready to join Mo/Valentin/etc...
Ron
|
88.3310 | | POWDML::GARBARINO | | Wed Jul 31 1996 15:10 | 7 |
| > Face the facts, last year was a fluke. DD is trying to keep the
> Sox competitive to keep Fenway reasonable full of fans, until the
> next group of youngsters are ready to join Mo/Valentin/etc...
And hopefully he is as good a talent scout as reputed. Getting Alex
Ochoa (Mets) is getting quality minor league talent, IMO. Trading for
single-A, or relatively unknown AA/AAA players appears to be a crapshoot.
|
88.3311 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Jul 31 1996 15:17 | 18 |
|
Joe,
>> Face the facts, last year was a fluke. DD is trying to keep the
>> Sox competitive to keep Fenway reasonable full of fans, until the
>> next group of youngsters are ready to join Mo/Valentin/etc...
>And hopefully he is as good a talent scout as reputed. Getting Alex
>Ochoa (Mets) is getting quality minor league talent, IMO. Trading for
>single-A, or relatively unknown AA/AAA players appears to be a crapshoot.
Not really. Single-A _pitchers_ are, undoubtedly (and with rare
exceptions). It's not terribly difficult to gain a reasonable idea
about what a AA or AAA player will do in the majors; about as good
idea as what a major league player will do, actually. Pitchers are
always more risky.
Joe
|
88.3312 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Wed Jul 31 1996 16:27 | 9 |
|
In youngsters, I'm talking about your Jeff Suppan, Trot Nixon,
Donnie Sadler, Nomar Garciappara, Brian Rose, Carl Pavano. As long
as DD stays on the speed/defense side of building a team, plus
developing young pitchers, I'll give him the benefit of the doubt. You
can always pick up the 3 run HR type of power guy to play DH and bat
4th/5th.
Ron
|
88.3313 | May be building up the farm, but get no results | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Ain't no one gonna dog me down | Wed Jul 31 1996 16:35 | 7 |
| Of the guys mentioned in the previous note, only Suppan and Garciaparra
seem to be can't miss. Nixon is hitting under .250 in double A,
Sadler has been a disappointment, and the list goes on. It is
very difficult to pin hopes on an inexact science like the baseball
farm system.
NAZ
|
88.3314 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Tue Aug 27 1996 13:20 | 20 |
|
Nice win by the Sox last night in Anaheim. I suppose it's too much to hope
that Wakefield is entering one of his hot streaks...
What all the columnists are saying is true - they *have* to do well on this
road trip to have a prayer of winning the wild card. 12-game trip - if they
could go 8-4, they'd be in good shape for the home stretch.
I'll be the first to admit that I thought they should have a fork stuck in
them two months back. In fact, I'm not sure it's in the club's best interest
in the long haul if they were to make the playoffs - it'd be nice if they
could get some long looks at their future players. But if you're going to
win at the dance, you've got to get invited. I just hope they don't do
something stupid like trade prospects for someone to help them toward the
wild card.
I have to disagree with Groaner - I think if an AL East club is going to go
in the tank, it's the Orioles. Davey Johnson can manage as well as he can,
but he can't give them heart. The Yanks seem more fundamentally sound than
the O's, and may be getting some of their pitchers back just in time.
|
88.3315 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Tue Aug 27 1996 15:41 | 9 |
|
The last 6 games of the road trip are more important then the 1st
6. They are playing 3 in Seattle and then 3 in Chicago, both are
ahead of them in the WC race. If they are still only 3 games back
after the road trip, anything can happen. After the road trip there
are only 4 weeks left in the season, so you don't want to be more then
3/4 games out.
Ron
|
88.3316 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Aug 28 1996 09:34 | 5 |
|
This is getting a little scary - Heathcliff Slocumb actually shuts the
door with the bases loaded and a 2-1 lead.
What's next - dogs and cats living together?
|
88.3317 | OOPS! | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Aug 28 1996 09:51 | 8 |
|
A review of the box score reveals what really happened in the 9th last night.
The "highlight reader" on TV made it sound like Slocumb saved the game - in
fact, he entered with a 2-0 game, gave up the run, loaded the bases, and
*then* fanned the last guy.
Kind of makes you understand how the Phillies felt with Mitch Williams as
their closer...
|
88.3318 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Aug 28 1996 10:00 | 5 |
|
Kind of makes you understand how the Phillies felt with Heathcliff Slocumb as
their closer...
George
|
88.3319 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Wed Aug 28 1996 12:29 | 10 |
| I think Slocumb actually walked in the run after somehow getting the
bases loaded. He struck out Edmonds {?} to get the last out. I'm glad
I didn't see it live - just heard it on the news this morning.
Roger's won his last 4 starts including a shutout, a 1-run game, and no
runs in 8 innings last night. Good time to come around.
Former Sox Jeff Manto hit a homer for Seattle last night to help down
the Yankees. That's a tough series to decide who to root for...unless
you're a Mariner or Yankee fan, that is.
|
88.3320 | | SMART2::CHILDS | | Wed Sep 18 1996 11:30 | 5 |
88.3321 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 18 1996 11:55 | 18 |
88.3322 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Sep 18 1996 12:55 | 5 |
88.3323 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 18 1996 14:03 | 12 |
88.3324 | 10 years later he ties his own ML record | FABSIX::E_MAXWELL | The torture never stops... | Thu Sep 19 1996 02:16 | 4 |
88.3325 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Thu Sep 19 1996 09:12 | 5 |
88.3326 | | SALEM::DODA | Searching for the next distraction | Thu Sep 19 1996 09:19 | 1 |
88.3327 | | SALEM::DODA | Searching for the next distraction | Thu Sep 19 1996 09:20 | 1 |
88.3328 | RE: .3325 and .3327 | IMBETR::DUPREZ | I need a favor, Don Cornelius... | Thu Sep 19 1996 09:27 | 13 |
88.3329 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Thu Sep 19 1996 09:30 | 9 |
88.3330 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Sep 19 1996 09:38 | 7 |
88.3331 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Thu Sep 19 1996 09:42 | 4 |
88.3332 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | I need a favor, Don Cornelius... | Thu Sep 19 1996 10:06 | 14 |
88.3333 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Thu Sep 19 1996 10:09 | 6 |
88.3334 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Thu Sep 19 1996 10:24 | 7 |
88.3335 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Thu Sep 19 1996 10:38 | 12 |
88.3336 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Thu Sep 19 1996 10:43 | 7 |
88.3337 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Sep 19 1996 10:48 | 10 |
88.3338 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Thu Sep 19 1996 10:52 | 1 |
88.3339 | | SALEM::DODA | Searching for the next distraction | Thu Sep 19 1996 11:20 | 6 |
88.3340 | Face it-- Roger just had it last night | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 11:20 | 42 |
88.3341 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Thu Sep 19 1996 11:32 | 9 |
88.3342 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 11:59 | 9 |
88.3343 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Thu Sep 19 1996 12:02 | 4 |
88.3344 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Thu Sep 19 1996 12:02 | 1 |
88.3345 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Thu Sep 19 1996 12:03 | 10 |
88.3346 | This applies more to Roger's game than Nomo's, but... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 12:06 | 9 |
88.3347 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 12:19 | 11 |
88.3348 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | maranatha! | Thu Sep 19 1996 12:31 | 1 |
88.3349 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Thu Sep 19 1996 13:48 | 11 |
88.3350 | Roger = Hall of Fame | FABSIX::E_MAXWELL | The torture never stops... | Thu Sep 19 1996 23:02 | 8 |
88.3351 | have a nice day <-- something nice | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Fri Sep 20 1996 10:11 | 2 |
88.3352 | Just to see how close he is to Hall of Fame material | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Two months to Maui - Go UMass! | Fri Sep 20 1996 11:57 | 6 |
88.3353 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Fri Sep 27 1996 09:30 | 18 |
88.3354 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Atlanta Braves, N.L. East Champs | Fri Sep 27 1996 09:42 | 14 |
88.3355 | Sox Bus.... | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri Sep 27 1996 10:11 | 109 |
88.3356 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Fri Sep 27 1996 10:16 | 9 |
88.3357 | :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Fri Sep 27 1996 10:55 | 3 |
88.3358 | #21 | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Sep 27 1996 15:59 | 8 |
88.3359 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Fri Sep 27 1996 16:43 | 7 |
88.3360 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Fri Sep 27 1996 16:54 | 5 |
88.3361 | View From A 'Partial' Outsider | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Sun Sep 29 1996 20:31 | 41 |
88.3362 | Those Wonderful Cubbies | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Mon Sep 30 1996 09:38 | 25 |
88.3363 | Parade in October 2018........ | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Sep 30 1996 17:14 | 4 |
88.3364 | The old vote of no confidence comes through again... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Sep 30 1996 18:45 | 12 |
88.3365 | | NQOS01::nqsrv211.nqo.dec.com::Workbench | | Mon Sep 30 1996 20:12 | 5 |
88.3366 | I mentioned it quite a few replies back | PHXSS1::HEISER | maranatha! | Mon Sep 30 1996 20:14 | 1 |
88.3367 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Mon Sep 30 1996 23:55 | 6 |
88.3368 | This is only the beginning | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Tue Oct 01 1996 07:41 | 25 |
88.3369 | Adolph Duquette.......... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Oct 01 1996 09:43 | 8 |
88.3370 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Oct 01 1996 09:45 | 22 |
88.3371 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Oct 01 1996 10:06 | 13 |
88.3372 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Atlanta Braves, N.L. East Champs | Tue Oct 01 1996 10:27 | 31 |
88.3373 | Wrong man fired that's for sure | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Oct 01 1996 10:31 | 21 |
88.3374 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Atlanta Braves, N.L. East Champs | Tue Oct 01 1996 10:46 | 22 |
88.3375 | The Adolph crack was low though | CSLALL::BRULE | Smoke on the Water | Tue Oct 01 1996 11:05 | 16 |
88.3376 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Oct 01 1996 11:23 | 17 |
88.3377 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Oct 01 1996 11:34 | 6 |
88.3378 | Angry Clemens, Valentin, Vaughn not good... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Oct 01 1996 11:39 | 26 |
88.3379 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Oct 01 1996 12:35 | 8 |
88.3380 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Atlanta Braves, N.L. East Champs | Tue Oct 01 1996 12:42 | 29 |
88.3381 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Smoke on the Water | Tue Oct 01 1996 12:59 | 5 |
88.3382 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Oct 01 1996 13:04 | 13 |
88.3383 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Tue Oct 01 1996 13:06 | 18 |
88.3384 | His way or the Highway.... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Oct 01 1996 13:10 | 8 |
88.3385 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Smoke on the Water | Tue Oct 01 1996 13:33 | 15 |
88.3386 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Tue Oct 01 1996 14:00 | 8 |
88.3387 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Oct 01 1996 14:19 | 6 |
88.3388 | | CROW::MAIEWSKI | Atlanta Braves, N.L. East Champs | Tue Oct 01 1996 14:54 | 15 |
88.3389 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Oct 01 1996 15:20 | 3 |
88.3390 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Tastes like chicken | Tue Oct 01 1996 15:22 | 8 |
88.3391 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Atlanta Braves, N.L. East Champs | Tue Oct 01 1996 15:34 | 20 |
88.3392 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Smoke on the Water | Tue Oct 01 1996 16:31 | 12 |
88.3393 | Duquette is dihonest with himself | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Welcome back, NBA! | Wed Oct 02 1996 12:31 | 38 |
88.3394 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Atlanta Braves, N.L. East Champs | Wed Oct 02 1996 14:50 | 39 |
88.3395 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Thu Oct 03 1996 14:21 | 6 |
88.3396 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Thu Oct 03 1996 14:40 | 13 |
88.3397 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Atlanta Braves, N.L. East Champs | Thu Oct 03 1996 14:59 | 6 |
88.3398 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Thu Oct 03 1996 17:42 | 4 |
88.3399 | | NIOSS1::REEVE | | Fri Oct 04 1996 12:00 | 4 |
88.3400 | where would you live? | PHXSS1::HEISER | maranatha! | Fri Oct 04 1996 12:01 | 1 |
88.3401 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Tastes like chicken | Fri Oct 04 1996 12:55 | 4 |
88.3402 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Tastes like chicken | Fri Oct 04 1996 12:57 | 2 |
88.3403 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | maranatha! | Fri Oct 04 1996 15:40 | 3 |
88.3404 | Jose demands trade, to slow-pitch softball team... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Oct 07 1996 11:44 | 22 |
88.3405 | | SALEM::DODA | Out of my mind, back in 5 minutes | Mon Oct 07 1996 11:48 | 5 |
88.3406 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Mon Oct 07 1996 11:50 | 3 |
88.3407 | | SALEM::DODA | Out of my mind, back in 5 minutes | Mon Oct 07 1996 11:52 | 4 |
88.3408 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Mon Oct 07 1996 13:07 | 8 |
88.3409 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Mon Oct 07 1996 14:01 | 6 |
88.3410 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Mon Oct 07 1996 14:18 | 9 |
88.3411 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Mon Oct 07 1996 14:21 | 3 |
88.3412 | Softball skills NOT the same as baseball skills | ILBBAK::SILVESTRI | Soar with the Eagles! | Mon Oct 07 1996 15:46 | 14 |
88.3413 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Oct 07 1996 15:55 | 20 |
88.3414 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | PM&D Tools Support | Mon Oct 07 1996 16:12 | 8 |
88.3415 | | SALEM::DODA | Out of my mind, back in 5 minutes | Mon Oct 07 1996 16:22 | 11 |
88.3416 | I get the rags | ILBBAK::SILVESTRI | Soar with the Eagles! | Mon Oct 07 1996 18:05 | 40 |
88.3417 | | BIGQ::MCKAY | | Tue Oct 08 1996 08:10 | 15 |
88.3418 | Atlanta team wins World Series | ILBBAK::SILVESTRI | Soar with the Eagles! | Tue Oct 22 1996 10:50 | 9 |
88.3419 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Oct 22 1996 11:16 | 19 |
88.3420 | Clue....Tunnel.... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed Oct 23 1996 10:20 | 10 |
88.3421 | Don't want to hear it, Chap | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Oct 23 1996 10:26 | 12 |
88.3422 | slow roller towards first..... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed Oct 23 1996 11:44 | 6 |
88.3423 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed Oct 23 1996 11:52 | 12 |
88.3424 | But he didn't set it aside.... :-) | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Wed Oct 23 1996 12:36 | 3 |
88.3425 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed Oct 23 1996 12:56 | 1 |
88.3426 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Fri Oct 25 1996 12:58 | 21 |
88.3427 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Fri Oct 25 1996 13:17 | 7 |
88.3428 | | SHARE::DERRY | Color me impressed... | Fri Oct 25 1996 13:29 | 1 |
88.3429 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Smoke on the Water | Fri Oct 25 1996 13:33 | 9 |
88.3430 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Andruw Jones for President | Fri Oct 25 1996 13:35 | 14 |
88.3431 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri Oct 25 1996 14:15 | 23 |
88.3432 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Fri Oct 25 1996 14:21 | 11 |
88.3433 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Smoke on the Water | Fri Oct 25 1996 14:45 | 5 |
88.3434 | | SHARE::DERRY | Color me impressed... | Fri Oct 25 1996 15:09 | 3 |
88.3435 | | SUBPAC::SKALSKI | A reclined state of mind | Fri Oct 25 1996 15:27 | 15 |
88.3436 | Notable dates both | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Oct 25 1996 15:46 | 14 |
88.3437 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Fri Oct 25 1996 15:49 | 12 |
88.3438 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Oct 25 1996 15:52 | 9 |
88.3439 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Andruw Jones for President | Fri Oct 25 1996 15:55 | 5 |
88.3440 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Fri Oct 25 1996 17:55 | 10 |
88.3441 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Andruw Jones for President | Fri Oct 25 1996 18:19 | 22 |
88.3442 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Sun Oct 27 1996 07:44 | 4 |
88.3443 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Mon Oct 28 1996 09:00 | 4 |
88.3444 | I shoulda known better | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Welcome back, NBA! | Mon Oct 28 1996 14:02 | 10 |
88.3445 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Mon Oct 28 1996 16:45 | 17 |
88.3446 | It Will Be Nice | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Mon Oct 28 1996 17:22 | 13 |
88.3447 | Mitch Williams = Calvin Shiraldi | MOVMON::DAVIS | | Mon Oct 28 1996 17:31 | 15 |
88.3448 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Oct 29 1996 08:43 | 15 |
88.3449 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Wade Boggs makes me sick | Tue Oct 29 1996 08:50 | 14 |
88.3450 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Oct 29 1996 09:36 | 5 |
88.3451 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Smoke on the Water | Tue Oct 29 1996 10:14 | 5 |
88.3452 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Oct 29 1996 11:11 | 12 |
88.3453 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | maranatha! | Tue Oct 29 1996 11:22 | 3 |
88.3454 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Tue Oct 29 1996 12:18 | 6 |
88.3455 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Tue Oct 29 1996 12:29 | 14 |
88.3456 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Oct 29 1996 13:04 | 5 |
88.3457 | | BSS::NEUZIL | Just call me Fred | Tue Oct 29 1996 13:15 | 11 |
88.3458 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Smoke on the Water | Tue Oct 29 1996 13:38 | 10 |
88.3459 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Oct 29 1996 14:10 | 17 |
88.3460 | New coach | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | No directions needed | Tue Nov 19 1996 14:15 | 7 |
88.3461 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Tue Nov 19 1996 15:54 | 6 |
88.3462 | Sox hire Holtz, then you've got a story | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Happy b-day Kevin my main | Tue Nov 19 1996 15:56 | 10 |
88.3463 | | GIADEV::BREEN | | Tue Nov 19 1996 15:58 | 8 |
88.3464 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Happy b-day Kevin my main | Tue Nov 19 1996 16:06 | 20 |
88.3465 | Redsox will never get it, who knows better than I | GIADEV::BREEN | | Tue Nov 19 1996 16:43 | 13 |
88.3466 | Magic formulas don't work; Duquette isn't "stupid" | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Happy b-day Kevin my main | Tue Nov 19 1996 16:55 | 23 |
88.3467 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed Nov 20 1996 10:00 | 3 |
88.3468 | | SALEM::DODA | Visibly shaken, not stirred | Wed Nov 20 1996 10:15 | 6 |
88.3469 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed Nov 20 1996 10:33 | 6 |
88.3470 | Frog being led onto the spit | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Wed Nov 20 1996 11:19 | 10 |
88.3471 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Wed Nov 20 1996 12:39 | 17 |
88.3472 | SURPRISE | CSLALL::BRULE | Scooter Macgruder rules | Fri Dec 13 1996 11:18 | 3 |
88.3473 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Fri Dec 13 1996 11:29 | 5 |
88.3474 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri Dec 13 1996 11:50 | 5 |
88.3475 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Fri Dec 13 1996 11:59 | 2 |
88.3476 | | SHARE::DERRY | Color me impressed... | Fri Dec 13 1996 12:00 | 4 |
88.3477 | GOOD BYE ROCKET, its a SPLASHDOWN! | BIGQ::WEST | Kevin 225-4528 HLO | Fri Dec 13 1996 12:56 | 16 |
88.3478 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Fri Dec 13 1996 13:04 | 4 |
88.3479 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Just cover, baby! | Fri Dec 13 1996 13:30 | 2 |
88.3480 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Fri Dec 13 1996 13:37 | 3 |
88.3481 | Are the Blue Jays an AL East contender now? | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Bruiserball! | Fri Dec 13 1996 13:44 | 5 |
88.3482 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | R.I.O.T. | Fri Dec 13 1996 14:26 | 2 |
88.3483 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | A great face for radio... | Fri Dec 13 1996 14:27 | 4 |
88.3484 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Fri Dec 13 1996 14:30 | 6 |
88.3485 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Dec 13 1996 14:49 | 7 |
88.3486 | ? | WONDER::REILLY | Sean Reilly, Alpha Servers, DTN 223-4375 | Fri Dec 13 1996 14:55 | 6 |
88.3487 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Dec 13 1996 15:09 | 4 |
88.3488 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | R.I.O.T. | Fri Dec 13 1996 15:36 | 8 |
88.3489 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Sat Dec 14 1996 09:02 | 36 |
88.3490 | Next up Mo | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Sat Dec 14 1996 09:47 | 17 |
88.3491 | | 2975::WAUGAMAN | | Sat Dec 14 1996 10:32 | 20 |
88.3492 | Somebody tempt me, please | RTOMS1::SHERMANS | The former MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Mon Dec 16 1996 06:46 | 11 |
88.3493 | | MKOTS3::taydhcp-23-144-12.tay.dec.com::Long | taxation without representation | Mon Dec 16 1996 09:15 | 9 |
88.3494 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Dec 16 1996 10:25 | 6 |
88.3495 | One of the best records in the AL | RTOMS1::SHERMANS | The former MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Mon Dec 16 1996 11:21 | 6 |
88.3496 | Big sigh of relief by Duquette (congrats Dan) | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Mon Dec 16 1996 11:32 | 11 |
88.3497 | | 2975::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Dec 16 1996 11:36 | 18 |
88.3498 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Mon Dec 16 1996 11:47 | 2 |
88.3499 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Mon Dec 16 1996 11:50 | 4 |
88.3500 | he din't come cheap ($3+ mil?) | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Mon Dec 16 1996 11:50 | 1 |
88.3501 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Dec 16 1996 14:02 | 6 |
88.3502 | Wait till next year | CSLALL::BRULE | Scooter Macgruder rules | Mon Dec 16 1996 14:19 | 10 |
88.3503 | rotation of the future | PHXSS1::HEISER | R.I.O.T. | Mon Dec 16 1996 17:06 | 1 |
88.3504 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Mon Dec 16 1996 18:10 | 34 |
88.3505 | Don't Understand The Manager Thing | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Tue Dec 17 1996 08:47 | 8 |
88.3506 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Dec 17 1996 09:01 | 14 |
88.3507 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Tue Dec 17 1996 09:15 | 16 |
88.3508 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Tue Dec 17 1996 11:56 | 20 |
88.3509 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Tue Dec 17 1996 12:19 | 21 |
88.3510 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Dec 17 1996 12:56 | 10 |
88.3511 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Just cover, baby! | Tue Dec 17 1996 12:59 | 6 |
88.3512 | Rocket full of hot air (again) | LEXSS1::MURPHY | | Tue Dec 17 1996 13:16 | 6 |
88.3513 | Boston needed reconstruction not rebuilding | CSLALL::BRULE | Scooter Macgruder rules | Tue Dec 17 1996 13:18 | 17 |
88.3514 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Tue Dec 17 1996 14:24 | 32 |
88.3515 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Dec 17 1996 14:31 | 10 |
88.3516 | | SALEM::DODA | Retired Gnip Gnop Champion | Tue Dec 17 1996 14:44 | 17 |
88.3517 | ex | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Just cover, baby! | Tue Dec 17 1996 16:20 | 12 |
88.3518 | God save us, the incredible Dan Duquette | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Tue Dec 17 1996 16:35 | 41 |
88.3519 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Dec 18 1996 08:24 | 51 |
88.3520 | well put | SALEM::DODA | Retired Gnip Gnop Champion | Wed Dec 18 1996 08:30 | 5 |
88.3521 | Can you say average | CSLALL::BRULE | Scooter Macgruder rules | Wed Dec 18 1996 09:06 | 6 |
88.3522 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Dec 18 1996 09:20 | 24 |
88.3523 | a couple miserable seasons and they will not come | SALEM::DODA | Retired Gnip Gnop Champion | Wed Dec 18 1996 09:35 | 3 |
88.3524 | Patience, grasshoppa, patience | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | No directions needed | Wed Dec 18 1996 09:37 | 21 |
88.3525 | | SALEM::DODA | Retired Gnip Gnop Champion | Wed Dec 18 1996 09:54 | 20 |
88.3526 | Wouldn't buy a used car from Duquette, that's fer sure | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Bruiserball! | Wed Dec 18 1996 10:17 | 6 |
88.3527 | Agree (This Time) | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Wed Dec 18 1996 10:22 | 15 |
88.3528 | | SALEM::DODA | Retired Gnip Gnop Champion | Wed Dec 18 1996 10:26 | 10 |
88.3529 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Dec 18 1996 10:48 | 18 |
88.3530 | Maybe there's hope for Dan | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Wed Dec 18 1996 10:50 | 20 |
88.3531 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Scooter Macgruder rules | Wed Dec 18 1996 10:51 | 8 |
88.3532 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Scooter Macgruder rules | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:01 | 6 |
88.3533 | I'll expand my horizons-- just pass the pipe George | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:06 | 26 |
88.3534 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:16 | 17 |
88.3535 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:17 | 13 |
88.3536 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:21 | 13 |
88.3537 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:29 | 7 |
88.3538 | Selling tickets is always a goal | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:32 | 10 |
88.3539 | Is it true you were born outside Wrigley Field? | MKOTS3::taydhcp-23-144-12.tay.dec.com::Long | taxation without representation | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:34 | 6 |
88.3540 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:34 | 37 |
88.3541 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Wed Dec 18 1996 11:59 | 23 |
88.3542 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Dec 18 1996 12:54 | 31 |
88.3543 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Dec 18 1996 13:13 | 30 |
88.3544 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Wed Dec 18 1996 14:51 | 8 |
88.3545 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Dec 18 1996 14:58 | 4 |
88.3546 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Wed Dec 18 1996 16:07 | 3 |
88.3547 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Just cover, baby! | Thu Dec 19 1996 10:42 | 13 |
88.3548 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Dec 19 1996 10:57 | 29 |
88.3549 | Making it up as we go along... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Dec 19 1996 10:59 | 16 |
88.3550 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Dec 19 1996 12:36 | 21 |
88.3551 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Just cover, baby! | Thu Dec 19 1996 13:22 | 12 |
88.3552 | | NQOS01::nqsrv230.nqo.dec.com::Workbench | Pee Wee Herman's bodydouble | Thu Dec 19 1996 13:28 | 1 |
88.3553 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Dec 19 1996 13:37 | 39 |
88.3554 | u repeat everything u hear regardless or what? | SALEM::DODA | I'm BATMAN! | Thu Dec 19 1996 14:40 | 11 |
88.3555 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Just cover, baby! | Thu Dec 19 1996 14:43 | 16 |
88.3556 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Dec 19 1996 14:59 | 9 |
88.3557 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Thu Dec 19 1996 15:10 | 8 |
88.3558 | | SALEM::DODA | I'm BATMAN! | Thu Dec 19 1996 15:36 | 9 |
88.3559 | | SALEM::DODA | I'm BATMAN! | Thu Dec 19 1996 15:36 | 1 |
88.3560 | Middle of the pack 2nd baseman | RTOMS1::SHERMANS | The former MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Fri Dec 20 1996 11:06 | 27 |
88.3561 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Fri Dec 20 1996 15:11 | 14 |
88.3562 | Bad news??? | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Tue Jan 07 1997 11:50 | 17 |
88.3563 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Kazaam's my man | Tue Jan 07 1997 11:52 | 2 |
88.3564 | none needed | SUBSYS::BAILLIE | Mean Mistreater | Tue Jan 07 1997 14:25 | 4 |
88.3565 | | WMOIS::MAZURKA | Son_Of_Dig_It_Al | Tue Jan 07 1997 17:45 | 4 |
88.3566 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Fri Jan 10 1997 11:43 | 12 |
88.3567 | | SALEM::DODA | One World within.... | Fri Jan 10 1997 11:48 | 2 |
88.3568 | Sinks to his level | CSLALL::BRULE | Scooter Macgruder rules | Mon Jan 13 1997 07:52 | 11 |
88.3569 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Jan 15 1997 08:47 | 13 |
88.3570 | Sportsline update | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Thu Jan 30 1997 12:23 | 43 |
| NOTES, QUOTES, ANECDOTES:
John Wasdin, who was 8-7 with a 5.96 ERA for Oakland, is not a virgin
to New England. The
24-year-old former No. 1 pick of the A's spent a summer playing for the
Hyannis Mets of the Cape
Cod League. Players normally have day jobs and then play ball at night.
"I was a maintenance man
and yard man," said Wasdin. "I pulled weeds, mulched and fixed
toilets." ... Closer Heathcliff
Slocumb agreed to a one-year deal worth $2.975 million, a nifty raise
of $1.5 million ... Eddie
Popowski, a long-time player, instructor and interim manager for the
Sox, begins his 60th season
with the organization as a special instructor in spring training.
Popowski is 84 years old ... Red Sox
paranoia has reached its height where Sox personnel are no longer able
to speak to Sox media
directly and must arrange interviews through the Sox PR department ...
Red Sox officials are
watching closely the success or failure of the New England Patriots in
their attempt to build a
59,000-seat open air stadium in South Boston. That's exactly where the
Red Sox were looking to
build their new facility, but the Patriots have met with resistance
from community leaders and Boston
Mayor Tom Menino, who insists that building a stadium on that site is
not good urban planning.
Menino, in fact, says that the best place for the Red Sox to build a
stadium is right where Fenway
currently stands. Ah, but Mayor Menino, where would the team play for
two years while the
stadium is being built? ... At least the Red Sox have one less DH with
Canseco gone, but don't
worry, there are plenty more. Reggie Jefferson, Wil Cordero, Mike
Stanley, Troy O'Leary, John
Valentin (if he doesn't play shortstop) are all eligible for a
non-fielding position. ... Suddenly there's
competition in the starting rotation. While it appears Steve Avery, Tom
Gordon and Tim Wakefield
are assured spots, the other two spots are now up for grabs between
Wasdin, Aaron Sele, Jeff
Suppan and Butch Henry.
|
88.3571 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Thu Jan 30 1997 14:11 | 1 |
| Wow, Popowski is 84. That's incredible....
|
88.3572 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Thu Jan 30 1997 22:13 | 7 |
| I wonder if Pops can still flip the ball back to the pitcher from the
3rd base coaches box from behind his back. That WAS him that did tha,
no?
And speaking of 84, Pesky can't be too far behind, can he?
Ted
|
88.3573 | Justice to the Sox? | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Terps rising like a Phoenix! | Wed Feb 19 1997 08:57 | 16 |
| The beat writer for the Braves was on the radio this morning, and the
hot topic was that scouts from other teams will start showing up in
force later this week and next to take a look at Justice and McGriff.
He said that the two teams with an interest in Justice were Boston and
Cleveland. Not sure what the Indians have to offer, but with the
season being sold out at the Jake they may just eat his Justice's
salary (not sure how that would work). The Sox could trade Valentin
for Justice and maybe Blauser. Apparently the Sox SS of the future is
off limits.
I wouldn't mind seeing the Braves deal McGriff, put Klesko at first,
and keep Justice. Anyway, either Justice or McGriff will be gone
before the season starts.
UMDan
|
88.3574 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Feb 19 1997 09:01 | 16 |
|
> The Sox could trade Valentin
> for Justice and maybe Blauser. Apparently the Sox SS of the future is
> off limits.
I could live with that. The Red Sox definitely need a real RF (and
I'm not talking about someone like Darren Bragg who can field the
position marginally, but doesn't hit enough). Plus, Blauser is a
guy who could snap out of his hitting woes at any point and be a
contributor, on the cheap.
We've talked about this one before, and it makes a lot of sense.
glenn
|
88.3575 | George's dilema | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Terps rising like a Phoenix! | Wed Feb 19 1997 09:15 | 14 |
| Not sure how cheap Blauser would be ($3M+), but he is in the last year
of his contract I believe. If he broke out of his slump (a near
certainty for athletes in their last year IMO), and Justice is
recovered, the Sox would definitely benefit from the offensive production.
On the other hand, poor George is gonna be wrapped up in such a
schizophrenic fit on who to root for when the Braves come to town (Aug
29 - 31) that he'll have to be carried from Fenway blabbering about the
Atlanta Red Sox and the Boston Braves. The two billed hat on his head
will be spinning like a propeller. It's going to be hard enough during
the regular season if Justice and Blauser come to town, what with Avery
and Jimmy Williams already there. Oh, the humanity.
UMDan
|
88.3576 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Feb 19 1997 09:51 | 29 |
| George will handle it just fine. There's 50 years of tradition that involved
having both these teams playing baseball in town first in the south end just
across the tracks from each other then in the Fens just across Kenmore Square.
I can hardly wait to see Boston's two teams back home where they belong.
As for the trade I don't know, that sounds like a good move for the Braves
with the log jam they have in the outfield but I don't think it's a great idea
for the Red Sox.
I don't see where Blauser fits into the Red Soxs plan at all unless they want
him at 2nd base. If Valentin goes the left side will be Garciaparra & Naehring
with Barry Saddler or some journeyman type as a backup. That leaves Blauser
as an expensive Wil Cordero at 2nd or stuck in the DH mix.
As for Justice, sure it would be great to have a big gun like that in Right
but they don't need him or his salary yet. Time to sign the big guns is when
you are reasonably sure the farm system is producing. That may be next year, it
may be a few years depending on how the individual prospect pan out at the major
league level.
David Justice on the Sox right now would be another Dale Murphy, great player
but a couple or three years too soon. By the time they'd need him they would
have to resign him anyway and by that time the Red Sox would have him pissed
off and he would have worn out his welcome on sensitive Boston fans who don't
like arrogant athletes that complain.
Now if they got Jermaine Dye for Valentin, that would make sense.
George
|
88.3577 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Feb 19 1997 10:08 | 31 |
|
> I don't see where Blauser fits into the Red Soxs plan at all unless they want
> him at 2nd base. If Valentin goes the left side will be Garciaparra & Naehring
> with Barry Saddler or some journeyman type as a backup. That leaves Blauser
> as an expensive Wil Cordero at 2nd or stuck in the DH mix.
Barry Saddler is a local weatherman; he (or his namesake) won't be ready
for 2B or SS any time soon.
> David Justice on the Sox right now would be another Dale Murphy, great player
> but a couple or three years too soon. By the time they'd need him they would
> have to resign him anyway and by that time the Red Sox would have him pissed
> off and he would have worn out his welcome on sensitive Boston fans who don't
> like arrogant athletes that complain.
David Justice would be another reason to come to the ballpark, to help
the Sox win a few more ballgames. This is a one-for-one salary swap
deal with Valentin (if Blauser is to be tossed in, the Braves are
eating some salary). It makes sense because the players are in the
same pay range and Valentin (apparently) doesn't fit into the Sox'
plans beyond this year anyway. If you're into the rebuilding effort
there's also the added bonus that Garciaparra gets his experience in
starting now.
The rest of it concerning pissed off fans and arrogant athletes is
just more of your editorializing. Valentin's already pissed off in
any case. There's no reason to make excuses as to why David Justice
can't play in Boston.
glenn
|
88.3578 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Feb 19 1997 10:29 | 31 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3577 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN >>>
> Barry Saddler is a local weatherman; he (or his namesake) won't be ready
> for 2B or SS any time soon.
Fine, Donnie. My original point still stands, Garciaparra & Naehring are
still the left side and Blauser would be an expensive backup who would be
no part of the Red Sox future.
> David Justice would be another reason to come to the ballpark, to help
> the Sox win a few more ballgames.
The Red Sox don't need to win a few more ball games. They need to spend the
next few years saving money so that when the farm system starts producing they
can go out and buy up the talent needed to help those guys win. So what if
they end up 10 games out instead of 15 or if they get blasted out of the 1st
round of the playoffs instead of just missing the wild card spot? I just don't
see Blauser as doing anything this year to help them win the World Series
down the road.
And my point about Justice is that when we need him he'd be gone. Seems if
you are going to trade a guy like Valentin to the Braves it would make more
sense to get someone like Jermaine Dye or maybe a couple of younger guys like
Wonderful Monds, Damon Hollins, Terrell Wade, or Joe Borowski.
The Braves are a team that wants to win today where as the Red Sox are
building for the future. In general trades between teams like that work best
for both sides when a Veteran is traded for prospects that will be around
when the building team needs them.
George
|
88.3579 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Wed Feb 19 1997 10:47 | 12 |
|
I thought Barry Saddler was the guy who did the Green Beret
song.
>> And my point about Justice is that when we need him he'd be gone.
The point about Justice is that by the time the Red Sox need
him, he'd probably be retired. The rest of the guys you named would
be gone by them or pretty damned expensive. The Sox need Justice
now if they want to provide fans with a reason other than blind
loyalty to show up at the ballpark.
|
88.3580 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Wed Feb 19 1997 10:48 | 2 |
|
Why not move Valentin to the outfield ala Robin Yount?
|
88.3581 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Feb 19 1997 10:51 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3579 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Bang! Bang! Bang!" >>>
> The point about Justice is that by the time the Red Sox need
> him, he'd probably be retired. The rest of the guys you named would
> be gone by them or pretty damned expensive. The Sox need Justice
> now if they want to provide fans with a reason other than blind
> loyalty to show up at the ballpark.
Now there's the voice of Lou Gorman and Haywood Sullivan haunting us from
the great beyond.
"Heck with trying to build a winning team, just hire a big gun to put the
fans in the seats."
The Red Sox have been trying that since the early 30's. It doesn't work.
Why not at least try to build an organization that can win?
George
|
88.3582 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Feb 19 1997 10:54 | 14 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3580 by PECAD8::CHILDS >>>
>Why not move Valentin to the outfield ala Robin Yount?
I doubt he'd want to play there. Again, if he's pissed off he'll be gone
when his contract is up.
Best use of Valentin is to get 2-3 top prospects like the Braves I mentioned
who will be around when the farm system starts to produce. Second best use of
Valentin is for him to be the SS of the future and have him in place for the
win around the turn of the century. Anything else, he walks when you need him
most and you get zip in return.
George
|
88.3583 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Terps rising like a Phoenix! | Wed Feb 19 1997 11:10 | 13 |
| The Braves won't give up (IMO) any of the young guns to get a high
priced SS. They need to cut the payroll, and McGriff, Justice and
Blauser are the "cuttees". The problem would be at SS and to a lesser
extent 1st. Mordecai(sp) may not be a full time SS, and Klesko needs
to get a lot of reps in spring training if they get rid of McGriff. The
OF is fairly solid without Justice. If they get rid of McGriff and/or
Blauser, Justice probably stays unless they get a really good deal for
him.
It's all about the payroll, but I don't think the Braves will give up
any of their blue chip prospects.
UMDan
|
88.3584 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Wed Feb 19 1997 11:14 | 2 |
|
see that's the problem, used to be all that matter was being on the field...
|
88.3585 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Feb 19 1997 11:23 | 15 |
|
> The Braves won't give up (IMO) any of the young guns to get a high
> priced SS. They need to cut the payroll, and McGriff, Justice and
> Blauser are the "cuttees".
This is the premise that George isn't getting with those pipedream
scenarios of his: even the mighty Braves are looking to cut payroll,
and all we're talking about is a straight salary swap (or maybe
where the Braves come out slightly ahead), player-for-player, where
positionally the moves make sense. A more interesting team, a better
team, no damage done to the future, no harm done to society by David
Justice.
glenn
|
88.3586 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Feb 19 1997 11:25 | 8 |
|
> Why not move Valentin to the outfield ala Robin Yount?
He's too fat (and slow).
glenn
|
88.3587 | PIPE DREAM!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Wed Feb 19 1997 11:45 | 21 |
|
When is this farm system due to start showing dividends there
Georgie? I thought three years ago you told us it was a five year plan?
well if I'm not mistaken that is just around the corner.
Now you got Valentin blocking That Phenom Nomar. Where is that
can't miss Trot Nixon. What was his stats last year?
At the rate they are going you might wanna sign David Justice's
son when these prospects start showing up.
Suppan doesn't impress me. He might be another Aaron Sele w/o the
good first year. You told us last year how good Pawtucket and Trenton
was doing, care to tell us who won the International League last year?
You keep comparing this farm system of Boston's to Atlanta's, well
when are we gonna see some results.
Chap
|
88.3588 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed Feb 19 1997 12:01 | 3 |
| The Red Sox will be about as competitive as my dead grandmother this year.
As for some five year plan, I've yet to see any glimmer of it....
|
88.3589 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Feb 19 1997 12:41 | 29 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3585 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN >>>
> This is the premise that George isn't getting with those pipedream
> scenarios of his: even the mighty Braves are looking to cut payroll,
> and all we're talking about is a straight salary swap (or maybe
> where the Braves come out slightly ahead), player-for-player, where
> positionally the moves make sense. A more interesting team, a better
> team, no damage done to the future, no harm done to society by David
> Justice.
For the Braves, trading prospects for Valintin would be a good deal because
it would fill their most serious hole and give them a really good a shot at
winning the World Series.
What I'm still waiting to hear is any way in which Jeff Blauser is going to
help the Red Sox who stand little chance of winning the World Series this year
with or without an expensive backup short stop. So fine, it's a salary swap,
but so what? What does it buy them? Where does Blauser fit in the line up
never mind the Red Sox future plans?
Why make that salary swap for nothing when they can shop Valintin around to
a contender for some decent prospects and dump his salary completely? Why
go out and buy David Justice who will be long gone by the time the Red Sox
are ready to win?
Keep duck'en and weave'n Glenn, I've been asking those same questions for a
while now. I'm waiting for something that looks like a reasonable answer.
George
|
88.3590 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Feb 19 1997 12:52 | 32 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3587 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS" >>>
> When is this farm system due to start showing dividends there
> Georgie? I thought three years ago you told us it was a five year plan?
> well if I'm not mistaken that is just around the corner.
I've been saying all along that I believe John Harrington's plan from the
day he hired Dan Duquette is to have a winning team built from the ground up
just after the turn of the century. That's why he's talking about a new stadium
around 2002-2003 because that's when he's planning to have a winning team.
That would be completely consistent with hiring a guy like Duquette who
already has a track record for building teams through the minor leagues and
no doubt came here with the understanding that he would be allowed to do that.
> You keep comparing this farm system of Boston's to Atlanta's, well
> when are we gonna see some results.
Double AA Trenton did really well in the Eastern League. That's probably the
start of the 1st real wave with the exception of the few guys you mentioned
in Pawtucket. Also trading guys like Valintin to a contender for prospects is a
way to hurry the process along.
>You told us last year how good Pawtucket and Trenton
> was doing, care to tell us who won the International League last year?
Last I looked, Trenton was in the Eastern League, not the International
League. I believe Columbus and Norfork were on the top in the IL which would
make sense considering that the Yankees were already a contender as of last
year and the Mets are ahead of the Red Sox in development.
George
|
88.3591 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Wed Feb 19 1997 12:56 | 8 |
|
You kept touting Pawtucket last year too. Want me to retrieve the
notes? They took a swan dive right after the All Star game and it sure
wasn't because anyone went up to the parent club.
Chap
|
88.3592 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Feb 19 1997 13:06 | 16 |
|
> Keep duck'en and weave'n Glenn, I've been asking those same questions for a
> while now. I'm waiting for something that looks like a reasonable answer.
Blauser's a freakin' throw-in, George. I don't care if he comes along
or he doesn't, and if he does you can be sure that the Braves will be
picking up most all the tab (because there's absolutely no market for
him).
No one is lining up to offer "top prospects" for John Valentin, either.
You keep duck'en and weave'n, George, you're the one complicating a
very straightforward proposition with non-possibilities (and then
expecting them all to be addressed).
glenn
|
88.3593 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Wed Feb 19 1997 13:08 | 6 |
|
>> George, you're the one complicating a very straightforward
>> proposition
He wouldn't be George if he didn't.
|
88.3594 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Feb 19 1997 13:19 | 28 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3592 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN >>>
> No one is lining up to offer "top prospects" for John Valentin, either.
> You keep duck'en and weave'n, George, you're the one complicating a
> very straightforward proposition.
I'm still waiting to hear how the Red Sox are better off with Blauser and
Justice than without them. Given that they are going no where this year and
the next few years will be to break in the new kids, what does hiring
guys like that buy them? Why waste the money?
And I don't believe no contender would give good prospects for Valentin.
The Braves were really hurting last year for a starting short stop, else why
risk moving Chipper Jones mid season? They would be nuts not to consider
giving up some prospects to fill that hole.
Then there are other possibilities. With Walt Weiss not getting any younger
Colorado could use a good short stop. Imagine John Valentin hitting in Denver?
That would be worth the price of the ticket alone. The Dodgers are another team
worth giving a call.
Or what about the White Sox who seem to be wanting to win this year? Valentin
would be an improvement over Ozzie Guillen. The Rangers sign anyone to play
short? They also seem to be contending. I don't believe none of those teams
would cough up some prospects for a 1st rate short stop that could help them
win today.
George
|
88.3595 | TAP SKULL WITH HAMMER MARK SPOT DRILL HERE!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Wed Feb 19 1997 14:04 | 15 |
|
George writes...
That would be worth the price of a ticket alone. (about JV in COL.)
Then he can't understand from a Management type idea why David
Justice wouldn't be helpful to the sox????
Chapo
|
88.3596 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Wed Feb 19 1997 14:05 | 6 |
| > Why not move Valentin to the outfield ala Robin Yount?
>> He's too fat (and slow).
Can't be any worst than they had out there the past 5 years...........
|
88.3597 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Feb 19 1997 14:20 | 17 |
|
> I'm still waiting to hear how the Red Sox are better off with Blauser and
> Justice than without them. Given that they are going no where this year and
> the next few years will be to break in the new kids, what does hiring
> guys like that buy them? Why waste the money?
I'm saying they're better off for the next few years (or even one year
as they're impending free agents) with Justice than with Valentin.
It's that simple. Maybe debatable, but that's the opinion here.
As for "wasting the money", we're talking about moving $2-$3M in
payroll from the Braves to the Sox, no more. Don't think it's out
of the question, either. Duquette's the man who brought in Jose
Canseco, after all.
glenn
|
88.3598 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Feb 19 1997 15:09 | 24 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3595 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS" >>>
> Then he can't understand from a Management type idea why David
> Justice wouldn't be helpful to the sox????
I understand the theory about how a guy like David Justice will create some
excitement and help put fans in the seats. I understand that putting fans in
their seats was the primary goal of Red Sox management for 50 years.
What I'm saying is that from a point of view of winning a World Series,
trading Valentin for Blauser and Justice makes no sense. If the Sox are going
to trade John Valentin it would be better to get some prospects to fill in at
the high A, AA or low AAA level to draw in that point at which the farm system
starts to produce.
Winning a few more games before the team is ready to be a contender might
be exciting for some people but I'd rather see a long range plan with a better
chance of working. Watching the kids come up and watching the process of
sorting out the prospects that are for real from the life time AAA guys for
the purpose of creating the super structure of a world champion to me seems
lots more fun than watching some guy flail away banging out home runs to
make a far miss a near miss.
George
|
88.3599 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Wed Feb 19 1997 15:42 | 14 |
|
Just a quick note: There is NO way that Colorado is going to deal
Weiss for Valentin. Walt is a very large leader to this team and
anyone that thinks the Colorado management is going to mess with the
team chemistry and risk losing those sell-outs is not paying very much
attention.
I can tell you that you'd be hard pressed pressed to find a
knowledgable Rockie fan or someone from the press core around here who
thinks that his 36 errors last year outweigh his leadership in the
dugout and lockerroom.
Marc
|
88.3600 | Have I asked this before? | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Terps rising like a Phoenix! | Wed Feb 19 1997 16:13 | 11 |
| I may have asked this before, but does the whole Boston sports
community buy into the "building for a WS Champ at the turn of the
century" theory? Are the fans really willing to wait that long, in
this day and age, for a WS? Are they in fact happy with the progress
shown to date, and is Williams the coach to take them there?
In Atlanta, give this team a couple of losing seasons and the fans
would drop them like a hot potato and find another sports team du
jour.
UMDan
|
88.3601 | Gotta develop your own players | IMINMK::SILVESTRI | Penuts Gang turns 10 in 1997! | Wed Feb 19 1997 16:38 | 46 |
| >> I may have asked this before, but does the whole Boston sports
>> community buy into the "building for a WS Champ at the turn of the
>> century" theory? Are the fans really willing to wait that long, in
>> this day and age, for a WS? Are they in fact happy with the progress
>> shown to date, and is Williams the coach to take them there?
>> In Atlanta, give this team a couple of losing seasons and the fans
>> would drop them like a hot potato and find another sports team du
>> jour.
This past Sunday's Boston Globe addressed this ... they even
used the Braves as the example ... the Globe stated that it
takes *five to eight* years to rebuild the farm system from
the ground up, so that it is consistently producing quality
major league talent ... they also stated that the Red Sox have
done a great job of stocking their minor league teams, and
that by the end of the year, some of their top prospects may
be in the major leagues, getting a look see, especially some
of the young pitching prospects ... from a previous article
(a long time ago) more than one major league scout stated that
they would rather have the Red Sox young pitching prospects
than the NY Mets highly touted pitching prospects ...
Now, am I willing to live with a few down years in order to
see a World Championship cliber team in Boston?
Most certainly YES.
(In the same way I am willing to live through a horrible Celtics
season in the hopes that they get a great draft pick, and can
become a legitimate title contender again.)
Personally, I am tired of the bandaid, stop gap approach to building
a team that Lou Gorman and the rest were so good at ... I would
love to watch a young team take the field and see it grow and
mature into a champion ... most Red Sox fans have waited a lifetime
to see a World Series winner, a couple more seasons isn't that
long ...
The only problem is, what if Duquette ain't doing the job? Then
we are right back where we started, with three, five or more
years wasted ... fortunately, most indications are that the
farm system is in good shape, and that the major league team
will start seeing the rewards of all the money being poured into
scouting, development, etc in the next couple of seasons ...
Vinny
|
88.3602 | | SALEM::DODA | Something so strong... | Thu Feb 20 1997 08:12 | 7 |
| UMDan,
The rebuilding through the minors part I think is a given. The
5yr plan, new stadium in 2000 stuff, uh, no. That's pure
supposition.
daryll
|
88.3603 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The *PACK* is back | Thu Feb 20 1997 08:41 | 2 |
|
They are in a 100 year rebuilding program.
|
88.3604 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Thu Feb 20 1997 11:08 | 9 |
|
>> The 5yr plan, new stadium in 2000 stuff,
I'd never heard of such a thing until George mentioned it.
The Sox have been talking about needing a new stadium since
Duquette was a schoolboy so I think any effort to tie having
a winning team in with building a new stadium is strictly George's.
|
88.3605 | | SALEM::DODA | Something so strong... | Thu Feb 20 1997 11:15 | 2 |
| Uh, yeah. That is what I said isn't it?
|
88.3606 | PETER GAMMONS IS A TWIT!!!!!!!!!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Feb 20 1997 12:04 | 53 |
|
Gammons: Pre-preseason predictions
By Peter Gammons
Special to ESPNET SportsZone
_________________________________________________________________
The ESPNET SportsZone staff persuaded me to give (albeit reluctantly)
very tentative, pre-preseason predictions for the upcoming major
league baseball season. A reminder : A lot can happen in spring
training.
AL East:
Baltimore Orioles
Toronto Blue Jays
Boston Red Sox
New York Yankees
Detroit Tigers
AL Central:
Chicago White Sox
Cleveland Indians
Minnesota Twins
Milwaukee Brewers
Kansas City Royals
AL West:
Seattle Mariners
Anaheim Angels
Texas Rangers
Oakland Athletics
NL East:
Atlanta Braves
Florida Marlins
New York Mets
Montreal Expos
Philadelphia Phillies
NL Central:
St. Louis Cardinals
Cincinnati Reds
Chicago Cubs
Houston Astros
Pittsburgh Pirates
NL West:
Los Angeles Dodgers
Colorado Rockies
San Diego Padres
San Francisco Giants
|
88.3607 | Puuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuke | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Feb 20 1997 12:05 | 7 |
|
He needs to tape some more of his segments from "beautiful" Fenway
Park.
Chap
|
88.3608 | I'll post the results of Chappy's poll, tomorrow. | SHARE::DERRY | Color me impressed... | Thu Feb 20 1997 12:43 | 2 |
| So... he'd still be a twit if he had the Yanks first? The season
hasn't even started and you're already whining. Sniff sniff.
|
88.3609 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Feb 20 1997 14:14 | 44 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3604 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Bang! Bang! Bang!" >>>
> I'd never heard of such a thing until George mentioned it.
> The Sox have been talking about needing a new stadium since
> Duquette was a schoolboy so I think any effort to tie having
> a winning team in with building a new stadium is strictly George's.
When Jean Yawkee was alive no one mentioned a new stadium in anything above
a whisper. Not only did she have a fondness for Fenway, many fans loved the park
as well and there was hardly ever much talk of building a new stadium.
A few years back two things happened fairly close together, Jean Yawkee died
and Camden Yards opened. John Harrington took over the team, hired Dan Duquette
a GM known for building from the ground up which common sense dictates takes 5+
years, and he started talking about a new Ball park just after the turn of
the century.
This was not my idea, it was John Harrington's. I like the idea but I'm not
about to claim any credit. As to whether or not it will work, Duquette's track
record in Montreal shows that he knows how to build a minor league system and
there do seem to be some talented guys coming along at the low and middle
levels.
Is there a guarantee that it will work? Of course not but right now things
look about the way they should for this part of the plan.
As for why 5+ years, add it up. If you start building from the bottom:
Year Level
---- -----
1 Rookie Leagues
2 Low A ball
3 High A ball
4 AA ball
5 AAA ball
6 Rookies
7 Young vets
And that's best case. Even having some back luck and missing a couple years
this is still pretty good progress if you start building at the lowest level.
Some times you can bring thing in by trading veterans for players at middle
levels to make up for guys that didn't pan out.
George
|
88.3610 | Inquiring minds and all | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Terps rising like a Phoenix! | Thu Feb 20 1997 14:23 | 3 |
| What year is year 0? Where are they now?
UMDan
|
88.3611 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Feb 20 1997 14:27 | 8 |
|
Oh now its 5+ yrs. Before it was 5 with significant progress being
made in 4-5.
Maybe its year -3????
Chap
|
88.3612 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Feb 20 1997 14:27 | 3 |
| I believe Duquette was hired in spring of 1994.
George
|
88.3613 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Feb 20 1997 14:51 | 43 |
|
Well, if Peter can do it, so can I...
AL East:
New York Yankees
Boston Red Sox
Baltimore Orioles
Toronto Blue Jays
Detroit Tigers
AL Central:
Cleveland Indians
Chicago White Sox
Milwaukee Brewers
Minnesota Twins
Kansas City Royals
AL West:
Seattle Mariners
Oakland Athletics
Texas Rangers
Anaheim Angels
NL East:
Atlanta Braves
Montreal Expos
Florida Marlins
New York Mets
Philadelphia Phillies
NL Central:
Cincinnati Reds
St. Louis Cardinals
Chicago Cubs
Pittsburgh Pirates
Houston Astros
NL West:
San Diego Padres
Los Angeles Dodgers
Colorado Rockies
San Francisco Giants
|
88.3614 | Most advanced lower minors pitching prospect was traded - age 22 | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass is back - watch out NCAA! | Thu Feb 20 1997 15:08 | 9 |
| Still doesn't explain why Duquette traded the best pitching prospect
the Sox had in the lower minors, Mike Rogers, for a 25 year old good
field not hit minor league centerfielder, whose name escapes me, but I
think he's Latino. Rogers pitched for the Lowell Spinners last year
and led the league in wins, innings pitched, strike outs, and ERA.
Thought for sure he'd be in AA this year and have a chance at the bigs
by 2000. Still might, but not in Boston.
NAZZ
|
88.3615 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Thu Feb 20 1997 15:13 | 13 |
|
>> This was not my idea, it was John Harrington's. I like the idea
>> but I'm not about to claim any credit.
The Red Sox have been talking about needing to build a new
stadium for close to ten years now. There's even a note (#56)
in the Red Sox notefile dated 1990 quoting Harrington as saying
the Sox would like to be in the new stadium by 2000. Really, you're
the only one that I've heard that's tied the building of a new
stadium to a timetable for producing a championship calibre base-
ball team. I'd think such a proposition would be too iffy
to tie a stadium to. No one else ever has.
|
88.3616 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Feb 20 1997 15:20 | 7 |
|
Look at the time line of how long it takes to build an organization and have
guys come up those levels and look at when they are asking for the new stadium.
Then look at Atlanta and Cleveland and how they got their new Stadiums just
about the time they were winning. Put 2+2 together and what do you get?
George
|
88.3617 | HTH's | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Feb 20 1997 15:28 | 10 |
|
4?
How new is Yankee Stadium?
Minnesota Baggy Dome???
Chap
|
88.3618 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | Sans Doute | Thu Feb 20 1997 15:29 | 17 |
| Unless the concept is selling the club with a stadium deal intact.
Then a Cleveland Indians concept of having the core players under
contract at pre free agent prices putting the team at peak value may ve
valid. The problem as I write this is that Cleveland has now had three
peak years: missed on w.s. because of strike, made and lost one because
they forgot the importance of left-handed pitching, and lost in the
playoffs. Now they've lost Belle. Some think the Whitesox will beat
them out at division level this year but they'll still make wild card
then lose Lofton. So, building the core at the expense of taking a
shot at the playoffs is questionable.
The Sox has a pretty good shot at the playoffs last year and Duquette
didn't go for it and made a mistake. The media is covering his butt as
usual. He should make a very difficult but crucial decision about Mo
Vaughn and trade him for real prospects.
|
88.3619 | An Oxymoron If I ever saw one!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Feb 20 1997 15:32 | 4 |
|
Real Prospects.
|
88.3620 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Feb 20 1997 15:44 | 8 |
|
Real Prospects == Andruw Jones
George
|
88.3621 | ex | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Thu Feb 20 1997 15:52 | 19 |
| >> Look at the time line of how long it takes to build an organization
>> and have guys come up those levels and look at when they are asking
>> for the new stadium. Then look at Atlanta and Cleveland and how they
>> got their new Stadiums just about the time they were winning. Put 2+2
>> together and what do you get?
Two apples and two oranges equals a fruit salad. Neither Atlanta's
or Cleveland's stadium had anyhing to do with producing a winning
team. Nothing. Atlanta been winning for quite a while now and still
they got their stadium as a result of the Olympics. They may have
scheduled the Olympics to coincide with the Braves being a suc-
cessful franchise but I doubt it. Cleveland built Jacobs Field to
replace a woefully inadequate Municipal Stadium. Between the amount
of planning and politicking it takes to build a stadium and the crap-
shoot that building a winning team is, it'd be foolish to tie one to
the other.
|
88.3622 | Braves got a gift from the Olympics | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Terps rising like a Phoenix! | Thu Feb 20 1997 16:09 | 13 |
| As the previous note says, the Braves got a new stadium mainly as a
result of the Olympics. The fact that they were winning made it much
easier for the local populous to accept all of the baggage that comes
with a new field. To coordinate a new stadium with a winning team
takes an incredible amount of luck, given the amount of planning that
goes into both ventures. If the Sox want a new field by 2000 it better
be on the boards by now, 'cause it's going to take another year (at
least) of court fights, palm greasing and other political payouts
just to put it out to bid, and another year or two to build.
Where is it going to be located?
UMDan
|
88.3623 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Feb 20 1997 16:17 | 29 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3622 by ODIXIE::ZOGRAN "Terps rising like a Phoenix!" >>>
>The fact that they were winning made it much
> easier for the local populous to accept all of the baggage that comes
> with a new field.
This is basically what I was saying. Tommy's twisting it around and having
me say that building a new stadium would create a winning team was humorous
but it has nothing to do with the point I made.
>To coordinate a new stadium with a winning team
> takes an incredible amount of luck, given the amount of planning that
> goes into both ventures. If the Sox want a new field by 2000 it better
> be on the boards by now, 'cause it's going to take another year (at
> least) of court fights, palm greasing and other political payouts
> just to put it out to bid, and another year or two to build.
They are aiming for around 2002 so they have a bit more time.
> Where is it going to be located?
Originally they wanted to put it in South Boston just south of the harbor
near Anthony's Peer 4 but given the South Boston reaction to the Patriots
stadium request in the same area they are rethinking things.
Now there is talk of buying up land around Fenway Park, perhaps even air
space over the Turn Pike and building something on or near the old site.
George
|
88.3624 | | SALEM::DODA | Something so strong... | Fri Feb 21 1997 07:49 | 7 |
| No, what we're saying is that while there's been talk about a new
stadium for over 7 years now and while Duquette is rebuilding the
team through the minors, there exists no plan that tie these two
together in some grand orchestration, at least there has never been
one publicized. That's entirely your supposition.
daryll
|
88.3625 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Feb 21 1997 08:46 | 15 |
| When John Harrington took over the team he said he was going to sell it. Next
he announced that he was still going to sell it but not right away, more like 5
to 10 years or so. Then he set about doing things that are obviously aimed at
raising the value of the team like:
- taking a lead role in solving MLB labor and other problems
- hiring someone with a reputation of building a winning team by
strengthening the entire organization
- pushing for a new park
If you look at that list it sure looks to me like a plan to maximize the sale
price of the team and sell it for an amount that will leave the Yawkee
Foundation roll'en in dough for decades to come.
George
|
88.3626 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Fri Feb 21 1997 09:22 | 30 |
|
>The fact that they were winning made it much
> easier for the local populous to accept all of the baggage that comes
> with a new field.
>> This is basically what I was saying.
No, basically what you were saying and have been saying for months
is that the Sox were trying to schedule their new stadium to coincide
with having a winning ball team just like the Braves and Indians did.
And that's just dead wrong. If you're changing up then fine just say
so but don't pretend that that was your position all along because it
wasn't.
>> Tommy's twisting it around and having me say that building a new
>> stadium would create a winning team was humorous
That's just not true. I never said anything even close to that. I
was just refuting your assertion that the Sox were tying having a
winning team to when they would build a new stadium. They aren't
and they can't. If one can't predict what kind of golfer Tiger Woods
will be five years from now then one certainly can't predict what kind
of baseball team the Red Sox will be. The Red Sox need and want a new
stadium absolutely and positively regardless of whether they're winning,
losing or middling. They can't tie one to the other. Ironically though,
the number one reason most clubs, the Sox included, give for wanting to
build a new stadium is the need to remain competitive and on one level
it makes sense. To compete with the big boys on the free agent market
you need the revenue to do so. Fenway doesn't generate enough revenue.
|
88.3627 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Feb 21 1997 10:04 | 49 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3626 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Bang! Bang! Bang!" >>>
> No, basically what you were saying and have been saying for months
> is that the Sox were trying to schedule their new stadium to coincide
> with having a winning ball team just like the Braves and Indians did.
Yes, now you have it right. That's what I'm saying. However in note .3621 you
said it the other way around:
RE <<< Note 88.3621 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Bang! Bang! Bang!" >>>
> Two apples and two oranges equals a fruit salad. Neither Atlanta's
> or Cleveland's stadium had anyhing to do with producing a winning
> team. Nothing.
Of course the stadium didn't have anything to do with producing a winning
team. It was the other way around. Having the winning team made it easier to
sell the new stadium to the public, especially in Cleveland where they did
not have the Olympics and they were competing with the Browns who also wanted
a new stadium.
>They aren't
> and they can't. If one can't predict what kind of golfer Tiger Woods
> will be five years from now then one certainly can't predict what kind
> of baseball team the Red Sox will be.
Now that's apples and oranges. While you can not predict how one player will
turn out you can predict that improving the structure of the minor league
organization will result in more quality players coming up through the system.
Larger sample size.
>Ironically though,
> the number one reason most clubs, the Sox included, give for wanting to
> build a new stadium is the need to remain competitive and on one level
> it makes sense. To compete with the big boys on the free agent market
> you need the revenue to do so. Fenway doesn't generate enough revenue.
Oddly enough, when Boston Globe owner John Taylor owned the Red Sox back in
1911 the reason he built Fenway Park and move the team from the South End out
to the Fens was largely because he wanted to increase the team's value and sell
the franchise. He did sell the team shortly there after.
I believe John Harrington is doing the same thing. Remember, it's the Yawkee
Foundation, not John Harrington that owns the team. Why would the directors of
the Yawkee Foundation want to remain in the baseball business long term? The
only thing that makes sense is that John Harrington sold them on the idea of
improving the team for a better sale price that would insure the future of
the Foundation.
George
|
88.3628 | Sox have resources to be competitive, without harm | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Feb 21 1997 10:08 | 19 |
|
As long as we're going along with what Duquette and Harrington are
saying, Duquette has repeatedly stated that he wants to field a
winning team *now* (but obviously not at the cost of the farm system).
It's not just smoke either, because not only does he say it, but player
moves he has made in the last couple years are consistent with the
philosophy.
The idea that the Sox should under no circumstances bring in any
30-year-old ballplayers (David Justice, all of 10 months older than
John Valentin, SS for the championship future) making $5M/year in
the shortterm is strictly George's. The way George would apparently
like to see the club run is one way to do it, but it's not Duquette's
way, nor imo is it viable with regard to keeping money coming into
Fenway over the next five years. It's an extremist position, all or
nothing, actually.
glenn
|
88.3629 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Feb 21 1997 10:20 | 12 |
| I believe Duquette is just giving the Corporate line. I believe that Mo
Vaughan and Roger Clemens believe that Duquette is just giving the Corporate
line.
Jose Canseco and someone like David Justice represent $5 million bones
that the Sox are tossing to fans to keep the stadium full while the rebuilding
process is going along.
If they were really serious about winning this year they would have kept
Clemens and Greenwell and added guys like Avery as well.
George
|
88.3630 | Whatever | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Feb 21 1997 10:29 | 11 |
|
> Jose Canseco and someone like David Justice represent $5 million bones
> that the Sox are tossing to fans to keep the stadium full while the rebuilding
> process is going along.
Whatever you want to call it, it's ongoing. Even Avery's deal is a
fairly short one. You're on record as saying these deals make no
sense, yet Duquette is making them (and, in general, I'm not opposed).
glenn
|
88.3631 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Feb 21 1997 10:38 | 9 |
| When did I complain about the Avery deal? Yes it's short term but if he does
well here the Red Sox may have an edge in signing him longer term. That makes
sense.
Justice, I don't know. He's had a history of injury problems and seems like
too big a risk for the long term. Avery by contrast is 4 years younger and was
only impacted by an injury once.
George
|
88.3632 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Fri Feb 21 1997 11:21 | 26 |
|
> No, basically what you were saying and have been saying for months
> is that the Sox were trying to schedule their new stadium to coincide
> with having a winning ball team just like the Braves and Indians did.
>> Yes, now you have it right. That's what I'm saying.
And you're wrong. The Braves got their stadium as a result of the
Olympics and the Indians got their's because their old stadium
was a dump but unlike a dump it couldn't even draw flies. In both
cases having a winning team was strictly coincidental to getting the
new stadium. Especially, in the Braves case where they've been good
for years and essentially got a hand-me-down stadium. In both cases,
inadequate stadiums were replaced. Fenway is the same scenario. It
just doesn't make financial sense anymore and really hasn't for years.
And *that's* why it's being replaced. Besides the Red Sox aren't in a
position of having to "sell the stadium to the public" because they're
using their own money. Most reasosn not to build a new one are mainly
sentimental. I agree that Harrington is maximizing the value of the Sox
but he can't possibly have so prescient back in 1990 (when he said that
Fenway must be replaced) as to know that he'd have Duquette in place and
a rebuilding process set for exactly the same time that the Duke had this
club contending. No way. What he's done with the new stadium propsal and
bringing in a successor to Gorman is make smart management decisions
that really had to be made. That's all.
|
88.3633 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Feb 21 1997 11:34 | 21 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3632 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Bang! Bang! Bang!" >>>
... none of which rules out the possibility that the new stadium along with
rebuilding the farm system and producing a winner is part of a larger plan to
sell the Red Sox at a higher price.
As I understand it, it's the Yawkee Foundation and not John Harrington that
owns the Red Sox. I can see Harrington selling a charitable foundation on the
idea of plumping up the goose for sale but I'm still having problems trying
to understand why the foundation would want to stay in the baseball business
long term without a plan to sell the club.
>Besides the Red Sox aren't in a
> position of having to "sell the stadium to the public" because they're
> using their own money.
As the Patriots found out the hard way, just having the money is not enough.
You have to get the public behind you or they will put pressure on the local
politicians to kill any stadium deal.
George
|
88.3634 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Fri Feb 21 1997 12:16 | 26 |
|
>> ... none of which rules out the possibility that the new stadium
>> along with rebuilding the farm system and producing a winner is part
>> of a larger plan to sell the Red Sox at a higher price.
The new stadium has been bandied about for years. The rebuilding
the farm system thing is fairly recent. They can't be inextricably
linked as they came along at seperate times.
>> but I'm still having problems trying to understand why the foundation
>> would want to stay in the baseball business long term without a plan
>> to sell the club.
I'm not sure where you got this.
>> As the Patriots found out the hard way, just having the money is
>> not enough. You have to get the public behind you or they will put
>> pressure on the local politicians to kill any stadium deal.
It isn't clear that the Patriots actually have the money. They want
to lease the land at a huge discount. What's clearer is that having
winning team certainly isn't enough and probaly has little or nothing
to do with building a privately financed stadium. The Pats went to the
SB and they're still struggling to get their stadium built. So that part
of your scenario is shot down as well.
|
88.3635 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Feb 21 1997 12:24 | 29 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3634 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Bang! Bang! Bang!" >>>
> The new stadium has been bandied about for years. The rebuilding
> the farm system thing is fairly recent. They can't be inextricably
> linked as they came along at seperate times.
The reason for building the stadium might have changed. In any case are
you saying that you believe the Yawkee Foundation has changed their mind
about selling the team? Since I heard Harrington say he was going to sell
it I haven't heard him say he'd changed his mind.
> It isn't clear that the Patriots actually have the money. They want
> to lease the land at a huge discount.
Money had nothing to do with the protest from South Boston nor the local
politicians scrambling to get on the Stop the Stadium bandwagon.
>What's clearer is that having
> winning team certainly isn't enough and probaly has little or nothing
> to do with building a privately financed stadium. The Pats went to the
> SB and they're still struggling to get their stadium built. So that part
> of your scenario is shot down as well.
Just the opposite. The fact that the Red Sox stopped emphasising building
a stadium in South Boston and started talking about building in the Fens
suggests that they learned from the Patriots experience that having a winning
team would not get the stadium built.
George
|
88.3636 | ?????? | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Fri Feb 21 1997 12:32 | 17 |
|
>> In any case are you saying that you believe the Yawkee Foundation
>> has changed their mind about selling the team?
I'm not sure how you drew this conclusion. I never said anything
about this.
>> Money had nothing to do with the protest from South Boston
Nor this.
>> they learned from the Patriots experience that having a winning
>> team would not get the stadium built.
But you're on record (88.3623) as saying that it was exactly your
point that a winning team would make it easier to get a stadium built.
|
88.3637 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Fri Feb 21 1997 13:01 | 8 |
|
I thought I read someplace that by law the Yawkey Foundation
HAS to sell the Red Sox. Within so many years of Mrs. Yawkey's death.
Since John Harington is the director of the foundation. He is
responsible for selling the team and making as much money as possible
for the foundation.
Ron
|
88.3638 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Feb 21 1997 13:06 | 8 |
| Yeh, that's what I thought I heard as well. And if that is the case the only
reason that makes sense for John Harrington to be putting so much effort into
solving MLB problems, improving the team, and building a new stadium is to
up the price.
Else why not just sell it right away?
George
|
88.3639 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Spring Training is here | Fri Feb 21 1997 14:41 | 31 |
| This is just my opinion on what the Red Sox are trying to do and when
they will be contending for the whole thing not just the AL east.
When DD was hired 3 years ago Harrington stated that the goal of the
organization was to rebuild the farm system while at the same time
building the Major league to "where they can COMPETE for the division
title. DD has set up a top minor league that should be able to start
getting 2-4 rookies a year to make an impact in the majors. I believe
right now their farm system is one of the top 5 in the business.
When DD took over the Sox were old, had very little talent throughout
their minors and had no future. The facts are that in the last 2 years
they have won the Al East once and were contending for a Wild Card bid
last year. They are closer to where they need to be to contend for the
World Series then anytime in the last 10 years. Now they have the
Suppans' Garciaparra's etc all coming up. They have a lot more coming.
A deep farm system not only gives you rookies for your team, but if the
Red Sox were able to be close to where they think they can compete for
the WS then they can trade some of them for a top talent that a non
contender is looking to deal. The Yankees last year are a perfect
example of this. the last few years they added Pettite, Jeter, Riveras'
from their Minors and deal more prospects for Fielder, Hayes, Cone etc
which put them over the top.
I've see nothing that JH or DD wouldn't try and get a Justice or
someone like him if the price is right. Being a Red Sox, fan which is
like being a optimistic masochist, I think that they will start to seriously
content in 98. And they will be making trades for a couple of veterans
to help them. But unlike the sox of old the players they pick up will
be in their primes and not in their twilight.
Just an ordinary Red sox Fan who cann't wait till next year. :^)
Mike
|
88.3640 | Sox: 6th in revenues, 14th in salaries in 1996 = $15M profit | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass is back - watch out NCAA! | Fri Feb 21 1997 16:03 | 22 |
| How can you possibly say they are closer to where they need to be to
contend for the World Series than any time in the last ten years? They
were in the playoffs in 1988 and 1990, and won the AL East in 1995.
The team as currently construed has major question marks with starting
pitching, a closer, centerfield, catcher, and how the infield will
settle out.
I am constantly amazed at how people are suckered in by this great,
deep farm system. The only product from this system to contribute so
far has been Suppan, and he's been a failure (although still quite
young). Garciaparra was OK in his brief stint last year, but I'm
certainly not ready to crown him as the next Luis Aparicio. Duquette
had to give up four prospects at the end of last season to complete
trades for the perrenial revolving door of marginal players he
continually brings in, and traded their best pitcher in the lower
minors, Mike Rogers. If Sadler, Nixon, Pavano, Rose, etc, are still
with the Sox in 1999 and take then to the World Series, I'll be the
first one over in the Corw Cafe, munching on an extra-large order.
But it's not gonna happen.
NAZZ
|
88.3641 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Feb 21 1997 16:17 | 22 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3640 by TNPUBS::NAZZARO "UMass is back - watch out NCAA!" >>>
> I am constantly amazed at how people are suckered in by this great,
> deep farm system. The only product from this system to contribute so
> far has been Suppan, and he's been a failure (although still quite
> young).
Nazz, Duquette has only started building the farm system. If you assume that
he started by putting staff in place in 1994 then he started from the lowest
level you would look at:
Rookie league in 1994
Low A-ball in 1995
High A-ball in 1996
AA in 1997
AAA in 1998
Rookies cutting their teeth in 1999, etc.
Why would you be looking at AAA and the Majors now to evaluate the job
of rebuilding the farm system? That's a bit premature.
George
|
88.3642 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Spring Training is here | Mon Feb 24 1997 08:26 | 7 |
| NAZZ,
Look at what DD started with, look at what it has now, and look at what
publications like Baseball America are saying about their farm system
now. The farm systems are where every team that have contended for the
last few years are started. Look at Cleveland, New York and Atlanta
all started from.
Mike
|
88.3643 | I'm not buying Duquette's snow job. | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass is back - watch out NCAA! | Mon Feb 24 1997 09:47 | 8 |
| If I'm proven wrong, fine, but if there is no noticable improvement in
the team by 1999, can I then say I told you so? I simply have
absolutely no confidence in Duquette. My brother believes every word
this guy slings and we have huge disagreements about him. One of us
is going to be owing the other a big apology, and I'm confident it
will be him.
NAZZ
|
88.3644 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | A great face for radio... | Mon Feb 24 1997 09:58 | 4 |
|
Nazz, shouldn't that p-name be:
"UMass is back - watch out NIT!"
|
88.3645 | UMass will be a 6th or 7th seed | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass is back - watch out NCAA! | Mon Feb 24 1997 15:41 | 4 |
| UMass has a much greater chance of being in the NCAAs than the Sox do
of being in the ALCS.
NAZZ
|
88.3646 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | A great face for radio... | Mon Feb 24 1997 16:11 | 8 |
|
... UMass has a much greater chance of being in the NCAAs than the Sox
... do of being in the ALCS.
And your point is???
I'll address the "6th or 7th" seed comment at another time in a more
appropriate note.
|
88.3647 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:02 | 22 |
| I guess by now everyone's heard about how new Red Sox manager Jimy Williams
has moved SS John Valentin to 2nd base to make room for Nomar Garciaparra. This
starts a chain reaction moving Wil Cordero to left and pushing Troy O'Leary
back to right field where he will be in a platoon with Rudy Pemberton.
Williams also announced that Mike Stanley will primarily be a DH sharing the
job with Reggie Jefferson. That leaves Bill Haselman, and Tim Spehr as catcher.
Also in another announcement a few days ago they mentioned that the options are
up for AAA PawSox catcher Scott Hatteberg so he may be in the mix as well.
With Mo Vaughn at 1st and Tim Naehring at 3rd being locked up, that leaves
Centerfield where former Twins outfielder Shane Mack back from Japan and
perhaps Darren Bragg should see some playing time.
On the news this morning they said John Valentin will hold a press conference
where he's expected to say that he will sit out the season unless he gets an
extension to his contract or unless he gets traded. Duquette claims that he's
tried to trade Valentin but has had no luck.
Meanwhile Donnie Sadler and Trot Nixon should be moving up to AAA Pawtucket.
George
|
88.3648 | Rumor central | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | regnaD kciN, my hero | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:08 | 5 |
| Local Sports call in show has started the weekly Valentin for Justice
trade rumor. Was Valentin a SS last year? Is he better than Blauser?
UMDan
|
88.3649 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | A great face for radio... | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:12 | 10 |
|
Valentin is a better stick than Blauser. I wouldn't trade him for
Justice.
What a baby. He's staying out because "it's all about respect". But
he'll come back if they extend his contract.
Valentin had a great reputation among the fans and charities of the
Boston area, and he's flushing it all down the toilet.
|
88.3650 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:21 | 17 |
| This is true given the fact that Boston sports fans, like other sports fans
are so hyper sensitive to any complaint by an athlete. Question is, so what?
If he's afraid that he won't be able to handle 2nd base, a move there could
be as damaging to his career as holding out. On the other hand, if this forces
a trade to a team that will play him at short or gets him a contract extension
he will win out where it matters.
As for Atlanta, I think it would be a good move for them to take Valentin.
The Braves strategy should be to try to win this year and Valentin is a short
stop with all-star potential who could fill the hold created by Blauser's
injuries and extended slumps.
For Boston, Justice would not be a good trade. Boston is building and needs
youth. They'd be better to ask the Braves for prospects at the AAA or AA level.
George
|
88.3651 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:44 | 9 |
|
>> This is true given the fact that Boston sports fans, like
>> other sports fans are so hyper sensitive to any complaint
>> by an athlete.
That's your opinion but the reality is that most sports fans
could care less about Valentin's complaints but don't let that
stop you from getting on your soapbox and repeating the same
thing over and over like you tend to do.
|
88.3652 | Schuerholz will do it in a minute | RTOMS::SHERMANS | The former MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:44 | 20 |
| > Local Sports call in show has started the weekly Valentin for Justice
> trade rumor. Was Valentin a SS last year? Is he better than Blauser?
1. Yes. He's been a shortstop his entire career.
2. With the bat, definitely. His career OBP is .376, his career SLG is
.473, which compare to Blauser's .347 and .405, respectively. I'd also
give Valentin the edge defensively, although last year's numbers favor
Valentin (.971 to .917 FP, 4.68 to 4.00 range factor) by much more than
an edge.
Obviously, this is a great deal for Atlanta. How good it is for Boston
depends on whether you think they'll contend during Justice's useful life.
He turns 31 on 14-Apr, so he should be a contributor into the next century.
However, I consider Justice to be overrated. He's a decent right fielder,
but his career OBP is almost identical to Valentin's, and his career SLG is
only 20 points higher. Boston should not make this deal straight up, but
should insist on a prospect being included, probably about Double A level.
Steve
|
88.3653 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The *PACK* is back | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:46 | 4 |
|
and of course .3651 is your opinion as well, but don't let that stop
you from getting on your soapbox and repeating the same thing over and
over like you tend to do.
|
88.3654 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:48 | 9 |
| > <<< Note 88.3653 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI "The *PACK* is back" >>>
>
>
> repeating the same thing over and
> over like you tend to do.
If this isn't the pot calling the kettle black......;^)
|
88.3655 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Mon Mar 10 1997 11:12 | 8 |
|
Gee, I'd have thought Groiner would still be too misty eyed from
the big ceremony retiring Brad Daughtery's Cav's number. Po' po'
Groiner must have been recalling the "glory days" of the Cavs
when Bradley D Stiffboy led the Cavs into glorious season after
season of conference finals. Long may those banners wave. Of course,
now the Cavs are a widely prescribed insomnia cure and Tiger Woods
will score in the 90s before the Cavs do but o' those glory days!
|
88.3656 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The *PACK* is back | Mon Mar 10 1997 11:14 | 2 |
|
I heard you wore your red pumps to the big ceremony.
|
88.3657 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Bang! Bang! Bang! | Mon Mar 10 1997 11:53 | 7 |
|
First, I wouldn't go to Cleveland the place that spawned you,
Don King and Art Modell at gunpoint. Second, retiring Brad Daugherty's
ain't worthy of a ceremony. What it is is a sad commentary on
the pathetic history of the Cavs when they retire the number of
a second tier center like Daughterty who use to think his last
name was IR.
|
88.3658 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | Those dear hearts | Mon Mar 10 1997 11:59 | 12 |
| well they moved Johnny Pesky to third base so they could get Junior
Stevens big bat in and Junior needed to play short. At least the
impetus now is defense. I hope Valentin stays away from second base,
that's not a position for ojt. Frye is just fine for 2b.
I could definitely see Valentin splitting time at ss,3b and dh and even
spotting him at 2b. But baseball is big business and all about the big
salaries which is what this whole thing is about. I'm more concerned
about who's going to back up Frye at second base (hoping that Valentin
nyets moving there).
|
88.3659 | I hope he does stay out... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Mar 10 1997 12:12 | 10 |
|
> If he's afraid that he won't be able to handle 2nd base, a move there could
> be as damaging to his career as holding out.
The whole season? Nothing could be more damaging to a 30-year-old
"shortstop" than sitting out a season. I'd love to see it. Let 'er
rip, this should be very entertaining when you come crawling back...
glenn
|
88.3660 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | The *PACK* is back | Mon Mar 10 1997 13:01 | 2 |
|
Tommy, your stupidity is only exceeded by your ignorance.
|
88.3661 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Mon Mar 10 1997 13:02 | 8 |
| It's not clear he would sit out the whole season. He may be just saying
that as a labor type ploy to try to get an extension to his contract or a
trade.
If neither works, he could always change his mind along about April 1st
and play 2nd anyway. Most likely he'd come away with something.
George
|
88.3662 | Think it through John-boy... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Mar 10 1997 13:16 | 22 |
|
> It's not clear he would sit out the whole season. He may be just saying
> that as a labor type ploy to try to get an extension to his contract or a
> trade.
I thought your point was that Val might see playing 2B as more damaging
than sitting out. Whether he returns tomorrow, April 1 or the 4th of
July, second base will still be second base.
The point is that he has no leverage. This isn't like with Mo Vaughn
running his mouth. Valentin is not _that_ valuable to this team.
You'd like to have him in the lineup, but if he were to be so stupid
as to walk, the Sox still have the guy who played well at 2B over
the second half of last season (Jeff Frye). Hopefully Val sees how
tenuous his position is in this, makes some kind of a statement about
how he'll play his ass off this year until he can leave, then keeps
his mouth shut and does so. That's the course of action that's in
his own best interests. Otherwise he may just end up as the next
Jody "I'm going to outsmart myself of $10M" Reed.
glenn
|
88.3663 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Mon Mar 10 1997 13:20 | 15 |
| Saying that 2nd Base is damaging to his career would be the ploy. Any
excuse would do. Point is, if he looks like he's going to self destruct
then Duquette may figure why not trade him and get something instead of
nothing.
Duquette has said he couldn't get anything for JV but most likely when
he says "anything" he means "anything you would expect for an all star
short stop". If he realizes he's going to lose him and get nothing he
may offer him cheaper.
I don't believe there are 28 short stops out there better than JV. I bet
someone would be interested in picking him and having him play SS every day
if the price was right.
George
|
88.3664 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Mar 10 1997 13:25 | 15 |
|
> I don't believe there are 28 short stops out there better than JV. I bet
> someone would be interested in picking him and having him play SS every day
> if the price was right.
I don't disagree. I've already said that I'd take Dave Justice, as
that trade would improve *this* team. The writing is on the wall with
Valentin for after this season, though; he's a short-timer, with no
plans to make him the SS or the 2B of the future. We can't expect
and won't get good prospects for him; therefore just get something
reasonable in return that can improve the 1997 club.
glenn
|
88.3665 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Mar 19 1997 11:06 | 10 |
| Red Sox open on the West Cost against the Angels who are now owned
by The Mouse. That should give Fenway an extra week to thaw out.
Rumor is that the opening day pitcher will be Tom "Flash" Gordon.
Dan Duquette's "stat man", I forget his name and as he himself admits, no one
cares, said that John Valintin will probably be traded. The guy looks like a
refugee from a Software group in ZKO. The Sox got one of us.
George
|
88.3666 | They're unbeatable now baby... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Mar 19 1997 13:41 | 9 |
|
> Red Sox open on the West Cost against the Angels who are now owned
> by The Mouse.
Reports are that Alicea may start out as the Angles' starting 2B, so
be ready...
glenn
|
88.3667 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Wed Mar 19 1997 14:32 | 7 |
|
Report in todays paper says that ex-sox manager Kevin Kennedy will
be doing color for ESPN. Kennedy is scheduled to do color for the
Sox/Angels opener. KK will be working for ESPN, primarily doing West
Coast games.
Ron
|
88.3668 | he's one busy guy! | MKOTS3::LONG | Taxation without representation | Wed Mar 19 1997 15:17 | 6 |
| > The guy looks like a refugee from a Software group in ZKO.
Nazz works for the Sox, too? :^)
billl
|
88.3669 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Wed Mar 19 1997 15:57 | 8 |
| Remarkably Kennedy has never that I know of opened his mouth publicly
on the Dan Duquette business. Weei interviewed him after the firing
and he never criticized Duquette. Now Gammons using the usual suspects
(sources) has hit Kennedy pretty hard for example with stuff like "He
told x he wanted Garciaperra and Valentin that 'You're my shortstop'".
I'd love to have Kennedy's version of the whole fiasco but I doubt it's
coming and perhaps would have to be skeptical of it's veracity.
|
88.3670 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Mar 19 1997 16:18 | 18 |
|
> Now Gammons using the usual suspects
> (sources) has hit Kennedy pretty hard for example with stuff like "He
> told x he wanted Garciaperra and Valentin that 'You're my shortstop'".
For whatever reason, Gammons hated Kennedy from the get-go. Even
while Kennedy was managing Texas, Gammons was writing that he was
an egomanaic, the most unpopular manager with his players in
all of baseball, counting only Jose Canseco as a friend. As it
turned out, Kennedy was popular with Sox' veterans, and unpopular
with the younger guys.
FWIW, I don't miss KK and have been able to sleep nights since his
departure. Things were going okay until I learned of this ESPN
hiring...
glenn
|
88.3671 | | SALEM::DODA | Resignation Superman | Thu Mar 20 1997 08:14 | 7 |
| The guys I talked to on the Rangers, Pavlik, Barfield, and Palmer
among others all had nothing but good to say about Kennedy. They
had NOTHING good to say about Bobby Valentine. He was hated by
just about everyone on tha team.
FWIW
daryll
|
88.3672 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Mar 20 1997 09:21 | 15 |
|
> For whatever reason,
The reason is Gammons is an idiot who's in love with the Duke.
BTW how you guys feel about Mr Bimble????
Chap
|
88.3673 | Although this year's Celtics is nothing to brag about | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass in 1998 - Final Four! | Thu Mar 20 1997 10:01 | 5 |
| billll - I would NEVER work for that sorry excuse for an organization.
I've worked for the Patriots in the Victor Kiam era, and that's about
as low as I want to go.
NAZZ
|
88.3674 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 20 1997 10:02 | 12 |
| You mean Gimble the stat guy?
He's right, Valintin would make a good lead off man. He hits around .300
and has a great BB:SO ratio. His lack of stolen bases doesn't mean much in
Fenway. He'd be like Boggs getting enough doubles off wall balls to make up
for not stealing.
In general guys like Tony LaRussa and Earl Weaver have shown that stats can
be really usefull if mixed with traditional spit'en chew type coach'en. It's
no secret that Duquette is a stat guy so having a guy like this makes sense.
George
|
88.3675 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Mar 20 1997 11:38 | 13 |
|
Again it shows the sorry state that is the BOSTON RED SOX. The man
judges talent through stats. He very seldom sees the players in person.
One of his better comments was that Robbie Alomar would not be a good
fit for the Red Sox because he has trouble getting to balls on his
right.
Face it Dan Duquette the Great emancipator is losin it.
Chap
|
88.3676 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 20 1997 12:15 | 13 |
| There's no evidence that he judges players through stats alone and ignores
everything else. The only evidence we have is that he doesn't ignore stats. As
for seeing players in person, how do you know he doesn't do that? Besides, he's
got coaches who deal with the players and he can watch them play if he wants to
confirm something himself.
As for losing it, since his normal mode of operation is to build from the
bottom up how does that square with the Red Sox being one of the teams having
the most guys in the BBA top 100 prospect list? Seems he's doing just what he
set out to do and he's getting results that can already be seen up to the top
of the minor league organization.
George
|
88.3677 | !!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Mar 20 1997 13:21 | 8 |
|
Duquette should be in charge of Minor League operations. And he
should give the GM job to someone who can do it right? How long before
he pisses off Rose/Pavano/Nixon/Garciaparra/Sadler..etc...,The way he
pised off Clemens/Greenwell/Mo/Valentin...etc...
Hope all you want George this team is going nowhere!!!
|
88.3678 | | SHARE::DERRY | Color me impressed... | Thu Mar 20 1997 13:26 | 1 |
| Yeah, Greenwell was a big loss.
|
88.3679 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Mar 20 1997 13:34 | 8 |
|
> Yeah, Greenwell was a big loss.
Don't get billte going on this one. Trust me.
glenn
|
88.3680 | Greenwell, the Great Cornholio - Beavis Wannabe | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Thu Mar 20 1997 13:38 | 21 |
| |
|> Yeah, Greenwell was a big loss.
|
| Don't get billte going on this one. Trust me.
|
|
| glenn
Greenwell??? You mean The Great Cornholio.....
"I am the Great Cornholio I need some TP for my bunghole"
and
"Are you threatening me???"
'Saw
|
88.3681 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 20 1997 14:02 | 28 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3677 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS" >>>
> Duquette should be in charge of Minor League operations.
He is.
>And he
> should give the GM job to someone who can do it right? How long before
> he pisses off Rose/Pavano/Nixon/Garciaparra/Sadler..etc...,The way he
> pised off Clemens/Greenwell/Mo/Valentin...etc...
How do you know he's going to do this? He had a conflict with the current
set of veterans in that he is not ready to try to win and they have no reason
to want to participate in a team building for the future.
It is entirely possible that by the time the new kids come along he will be
ready to win and will go out and pick up the expensive free agents he needs.
Remember back when the Indians picked up Sandy Alomar Jr. from the Padres?
They traded some veteran, Joe Carter I think, for Alomar who had just won
some major award for minor league player of the year. Now I'm sure that if
Clemens had been on the Indians at the time he would have complained about
the move but that didn't mean that they had a policy of always pissing off
the veterans by trading away talent. It only meant they didn't need veterans
before their kids came along.
Same here,
George
|
88.3682 | HTH'S | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Mar 20 1997 14:10 | 12 |
|
Who's to say any Free Agents will go to Boston? Don't you think
players talk George? After Mo leaves next year more of it will come
out. To be a ML GM you need people skills, DD has none. He's a computer
like his pocket protecting having buddy Mike Gimble.
George stick with "YOUR" Braves. Even though they have a habit of
choking in the WS they still are on the right track.
Chap
|
88.3683 | | SALEM::DODA | Resignation Superman | Thu Mar 20 1997 14:20 | 4 |
| Chappy's right. He saw it on Hardcopy or 20-20 or something like
that.
|
88.3684 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 20 1997 14:23 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 88.3682 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS" >>>
> Who's to say any Free Agents will go to Boston? Don't you think
> players talk George?
The Veterans were pissed off at Duquette for one reason, he decided against
bringing in guys to help the team win because he was building for the future.
If in a few years he decides it's time to sign guys and win, the very fact
that he's talking to a veteran should be proof enough that he's willing to sigh
guys he wasn't willing to sign back in '96.
George
|
88.3685 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Thu Mar 20 1997 15:54 | 16 |
|
Darryl,
No its from listening to Mo/Valentin/Clemens etc.. Listening to
EEI. The Globe,The Herald. Everything is pointing to Duquette not being
a people person. Now go ahead and say the media this and the media that
but thats all most of us have to go by. Maybe if I could hang around
with you Darryl maybe I will understand? Huh Darryl can I??
Believe what you want to believe and in 5 years we'll see who's
right. Than you can say wow that Chappy is wise beyond his years. :-)
Chap
|
88.3686 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Spring Training is here | Thu Mar 20 1997 16:08 | 11 |
| Chappy,
You were saying Mo was going to leave BEFORE he signed his last
contract. And BTW how's Cecil like still being in New York? How long
before Hayes or Boggsie start bitching and moaning? Why did Wetteland
leave? How about Key? Nice pickup with Wells there. Is he going to
pitch this year or is he going to punch someone else out? My 75 year
old father-in-law has the gout. How long before Rivera and Jeter want
to leave? Ruben who? How's OldNeil doing. Can he swing his arthritic
back? And please tell me about GM's with people skills. Everyone knows
Georgie bore is the real GM for the Yankmees. Please refresh me on his
"people skills"
|
88.3687 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 20 1997 16:40 | 17 |
| There's really no reason for a GM to have any sort of personal relationship
with the guys on the team other than contract negotiations and most of that is
done with the players agent. If anything a personal relationship of any sort
with players would interfere with his manager's authority.
The hard feelings were not because the veterans thought Duquette was a cold
fish who wouldn't clown around at team picnics. They could care less what
he's like as a person. The veterans were pissed off because he wouldn't go out
and buy up the talent they needed to win last year. They had nothing to gain
by waiting for the team to build for the future.
When he decides he's got the talent coming up through the system all he has
to do is start buying up talent and no one will care that he's not a regular
guy. In fact hardly anyone will remember the brewhaha cause by the '96 veterans
at all.
George
|
88.3688 | | SALEM::DODA | Resignation Superman | Thu Mar 20 1997 16:49 | 8 |
| Chappy,
Relax, I was kidding pal. I really could care less about this latest
LDUC. You guys have it it.
Buy me a beer on Pat's Day and I'll call it even :-)
daryll
|
88.3689 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Fri Mar 21 1997 07:47 | 18 |
|
Mike I love how you always bring up the Yankees when we are talking
about the Red Sox's ineptitude.
Can I ask you something? When was the last time the Yankees won
anything?
Show me the note where I said Mo was leaving after his last
contract. None of this was in the open then. SHow me?
Yeah all those internal problems we have sure is gonna make us
fight with Detroit for the cellar isn't it. Fielder is an idiot. Key
went for the money.
Chap
|
88.3690 | Just answer the questions | CSLALL::BRULE | Spring Training is here | Fri Mar 21 1997 08:32 | 7 |
| Chappy,
No it shows that a lot of teams have players who moan and groan about
managment, have players unhappy with their contracts, and people who
want to get traded. You bash DD for these but don't say a word about
your own team's problems. Why?
Mike
|
88.3691 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Fri Mar 21 1997 09:59 | 12 |
|
Because I'm not in here 24/7 mentioning how good my Farm system is
or how great of a job my GM is always doing. Not to mention my team has
won somethin this century.
Not doing it to bust Balls, just commenting on what I think is a
misconception about the guy (DD).
chap
|
88.3692 | :-) | SALEM::DODA | Resignation Superman | Fri Mar 21 1997 10:04 | 5 |
| I value your input Chap. Really I do, really. I don't always have
the time to watch Chet and Nat. Please don't stop ok?
thanks,
daryll
|
88.3693 | ...OR MIKE LEARY... | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Fri Mar 21 1997 10:13 | 3 |
|
|
88.3694 | Why am I not surprised at Mr. Gimbel | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Fri Mar 21 1997 11:23 | 23 |
| As far as Greenwell goes all I basically am saying is they won with him
in and lost with him out. Personally in my observation, especially in
Fenway Park he gave them (by Redsox standards) one solid defensive
outfielder.
I had a trip to mro and back and listened to weei and then read the
newspapers on Gimbel. Obviously they're all having a field day at dd's
expense but basically it's all "DD is crazy to let that whacko run
around saying he runs the Redsox".
I've had an awful sinking feeling for over a year now that the
Redsox exactly have been run by some whacko for over a year. Surely
the comments about Valentin being gone by opening day originally came
right from Duquette.
And Gimbel may have a high IQ but a pair of rubes named Greenwell
and Clemens could certainly have predicted the result of what Gimbel
thought was a friendly, open baseball talk with an earnest, forthright
reporter.
"Er, Gimmy baby. If he's such a nice guy why's he got that dagger
ready to stick in your back".
|
88.3695 | must be prozac time | MKOTS3::taydhcp-23-144-90.tay.dec.com::Long | | Fri Mar 21 1997 11:30 | 12 |
| > As far as Greenwell goes all I basically am saying is they won with him
> in and lost with him out. Personally in my observation, especially in
> Fenway Park he gave them (by Redsox standards) one solid defensive
> outfielder.
Are you talking about the same Mike Greenwell? A "solid"
defensive outfielder??????
billl
|
88.3696 | This is incorrectable... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Mar 21 1997 11:38 | 8 |
|
> -< must be prozac time >-
We continually give Prozac a bad name in here...
glenn
|
88.3697 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Fri Mar 21 1997 12:16 | 11 |
|
I seem to remember the Sox winning last year, when Greenwell was on
the DL. Greenwell was the starting LF, during the Sox awful start last
season. As far as Clemens goes, the Sox had a better winning percentage
when Wakefield was pitching. I would love to have seen Clemens stay in
Boston, but not for 8 million and another 3 or 4 years. The biggest
lose IMO is Canseco. He protected Mo Vaughn in the line-up and was a
legitimate HR threat. I don't see Reggie Jefferson, Rudy Pemberton, or
Troy O'Leary filling Jose's role.
Ron
|
88.3698 | Or is that rumor pass�? | RTOMS::SHERMANS | The former MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Fri Mar 21 1997 12:42 | 6 |
| > legitimate HR threat. I don't see Reggie Jefferson, Rudy Pemberton, or
> Troy O'Leary filling Jose's role.
No, but David Justice could.
Steve
|
88.3699 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Fri Mar 21 1997 13:35 | 6 |
|
MIKE BIMBLE SAYS DAVID CAN'T HIT A LOW AND OUTSIDE PITCH.
DD will never go after him....
|
88.3700 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Fri Mar 21 1997 13:37 | 9 |
|
Btw if you wanna see what he looks like (bimble) look in this weeks
Baseball weekly Fantasy section. He owns a team in the BBW fantasy
league. Check out his comments and see who he sounds like.
Chap
|
88.3701 | Thanks Chap! | SALEM::DODA | Resignation Superman | Fri Mar 21 1997 14:27 | 1 |
| I know I'm running out right now for a copy.....
|
88.3702 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Fri Mar 21 1997 14:30 | 1 |
| No Prob
|
88.3703 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri Mar 21 1997 14:33 | 11 |
| We're talking Greenwell here and Daryll Doda hasn't piped in? I'm amazed.
Mike "Call Me Mr. Concussion Cause the Wall Came Up To Fast" Greenwell has a
vast empty space between his conception of his abilities (superb) and the
reality of his abilities (mediocre at best).
The Great Cornholio.....are you threatening me?
'Saw
|
88.3704 | | SALEM::DODA | Resignation Superman | Fri Mar 21 1997 14:39 | 4 |
| Ok ok. The thought of no Greenwell out in LF playing every
routine fly into an adventure is truly sad. The only thing worse
than a 4th place team is a boring 4th place team. No cornholio,
no gump, no silly outfits, no silly comments. I miss him already.
|
88.3705 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Fri Mar 21 1997 14:47 | 10 |
| I compared Greenwell with the other Redsox outfielders. He's as
underrated as Duquette is overrated. But he's ancient history now.
Defensively they'll be behind with Cordero out that not to perish the
thought Jefferson. Mack? Who knows. Bragg can't give us relatively
the same we got from Greenwell in center but he can in right.
The Sox have given total short shrift to centerfield since they had
Hatcher out there and before that Burks. In fact outfield defense in
general. Find three guys that can hit and the one who can touch his
toes plays center is the motto.
|
88.3706 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Mar 21 1997 14:48 | 5 |
|
You know, I think I'm more optimistic about the Sox (I expect them
to finish 1st or 2nd, certainly over .500) than many of the Sox fans...
Joe
|
88.3707 | I Agree With George | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Sun Mar 23 1997 10:06 | 16 |
| I disagree with George a lot of the time, but I think he
has a good point here. I don't know how one can discount
the simple concept that this man's means to attain success
is to seed the farm system and that it takes time.
I think the verdict on Duquette is unsure until the farm
system is both well established AND has produced the brunt
of the Red Sox major league team. At that time, we may
see Duquette finish the puzzle with a select few veterans.
And veterans whose age better coincides with the team he
wants to develop from youth.
I think its the way to go and reality is that such a way takes
time.
Tony
|
88.3708 | | AD::HEATH | I killed a 6 pack to watch it die | Mon Mar 24 1997 18:51 | 4 |
|
Joe what are you basing your view on? I see the Sox as a .500 team
no better. There are just to many question marks in the pitching.
|
88.3709 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Mar 25 1997 07:55 | 13 |
|
> Joe what are you basing your view on?
A good offense and adequate pitching. Gordon should do better w/o
Kennedy, and Avery and Wakefield should be average - which, with a good
offense, should be fine. And I like Wasdin as well...
> I see the Sox as a .500 team
> no better. There are just to many question marks in the pitching.
There's lots of reasonable answers, though.
Joe
|
88.3710 | Still mathematically alive!!! | CSLALL::BRULE | Spring Training is here | Tue Mar 25 1997 09:05 | 9 |
| I agree with Joe that this team will finish around where it was last
year and the pitching will be the reason. Sele is having a decent
spring and maybe a big surprise. Right now it's an average team with
decent depth. Also starting up on the left coast should help their
pitching. So much depends on Pemberton, Garciaparra, Cordero maturing.
Mo's spring numbers do concern me. Jefferson could be the surprise of
the A.L.
Mike
|
88.3711 | Red Sox move to the senior circuit? | BRLLNT::LONG | Taxation without representation | Wed Mar 26 1997 08:37 | 7 |
| What's this latest scuttle I heard on the radio this
morning? Red Sox to move to the National League????
Anyone else hear this?
billl
|
88.3712 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Wed Mar 26 1997 08:41 | 2 |
|
Yeah it's done deal.
|
88.3713 | | BRLLNT::LONG | Taxation without representation | Wed Mar 26 1997 08:44 | 1 |
| staring when?
|
88.3714 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Wed Mar 26 1997 08:43 | 5 |
| actually they'll consider it is what Harrington said. If any team in the either
league wishes to remain with their present league than they can. Soxs basically
said we can't beat em we may as well join them. A finacial move Sinden would
be proud of. No overweight overpaid DH.......
|
88.3715 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Wed Mar 26 1997 08:54 | 13 |
| |
|actually they'll consider it is what Harrington said. If any team in the either
|league wishes to remain with their present league than they can. Soxs basically
|said we can't beat em we may as well join them. A finacial move Sinden would
|be proud of. No overweight overpaid DH.......
|
It'd be interesting.
For years the Sox have tried to win on home-run power. Now they'd have to
learn to play real baseball....8^)
|
88.3716 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Mar 26 1997 09:04 | 22 |
| This is all just a small part of a much larger negotiation resulting from the
two expansion teams coming up next year. The plan right now is that one team
will be added to each league resulting in an odd number of teams in each league
for the 1st time ever.
To avoid having at least one team idle at any time MLB is considering having
interleague play year round. Also due to the fact that some teams in the
midwest are not happy about playing in Western divisions (The Rangers and
Royals in particular) there has been talk of having some teams switch leagues.
Compounding this is the search for a permanent solution to the DH problem
in interleague play. A number of people seem unhappy with the current system
of using the DH in AL parks but not NL parks. Some want to drop the DH but
the Players Union is against it.
In short, nothing is nailed down, they have a long way to go. This is one
of those cases where some reporter probably asked "is it possible the Red
Sox would go to the NL", a vague indecisive answer came back mainly because
that's such a small part of the total picture then the reporter spun it as
"RED SOX CONSIDERING GOING TO NL".
George
|
88.3717 | Pitchers and designated hitters living in sin, etc... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Mar 26 1997 10:00 | 7 |
|
Translation of this Red Sox-to-NL business: in the future, nothing but
nothing is sacrosanct. All that we know and trust must be questioned.
God lives, Neitzche is dead...
glenn
|
88.3718 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Mar 26 1997 10:11 | 21 |
| One thing that would take a lot of the pressure off would be if at least one
AL team moved west. For example if the Brewers moved back to the West Cost to
some place like Sacramento or Portland that would mean only one of Texas and
K.C. would have to be in the Western Division.
Who knows, what with having lost two major league teams already and a
squabble coming up over the replacement of County Stadium stranger things
could happen.
The change of leagues would probably happen if a National League team moved
west (or agreed to play in the West) since the AL needs west coast teams worse
than the NL. Other than that I doubt many teams will switch leagues.
Say for example the Pirates moved to Sacramento. Then they and the Royals
could swap leagues with the Pirates going into the AL West and the Royals
taking their place in the NL Central.
At any rate I would expect that type of change rather than a hole scale
reorg with teams like the Red Sox or Yankees changing leagues.
George
|
88.3719 | Jefferson, O'Leary, Stanley, etc. all out of work? | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass in 1998 - Final Four! | Wed Mar 26 1997 10:24 | 3 |
| What would the Sox do with their seven DHs?
NAZZ
|
88.3720 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Wed Mar 26 1997 11:09 | 13 |
| Well Cordero was touted as showing good range in making several nice
running catches yesterday.
Is Mack a lefty or righty and does he hit right or left? O'Leary will
probably platoon in the left or right or even center but very little
dh. Possible Bragg in right and O'Leary replacing Mack or Cordero.
The Redsox had a guy Billy Goodman who played second,first and outfield
in the 50s and some third if I'm not mistaken. Won a B.A. along the
way. Now if Cordero is not too sensitive he could possibly be a
utility infield backup.
I don't think Williams wants Valentin as his second baseman though.
|
88.3721 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Wed Mar 26 1997 11:31 | 3 |
|
Who said anything about the Yankees going to the NL?
|
88.3722 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Mar 26 1997 11:37 | 7 |
| No one. The talk is of general re alignment with some teams possibly changing
leagues for the reasons I've mentioned before.
Since nothing is being ruled out, even things that are very unlikely are
being spun as "possible" by reporters to sell papers.
George
|
88.3723 | HTH's | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Wed Mar 26 1997 11:41 | 4 |
|
Trust me, the last team that would leave the Al for the NL is the
Yankees. ITS CALLED TRADITION....
|
88.3724 | Remind me to tell you about that night in NewYork | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Wed Mar 26 1997 11:47 | 8 |
| Given today's sports business climate, having the Mets in the NL is the
much stronger barrier to a Yankees move.
But think of those poor reporters, a month in Florida while their
editors freeze and nothing but Gimbel and his caimans and mouth.
As we used to say about a few buddies from the old campaign circuit of
yesteryear, "They're desperate!"
|
88.3725 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Mar 26 1997 12:07 | 9 |
|
> Trust me, the last team that would leave the Al for the NL is the
> Yankees. ITS CALLED TRADITION....
...says Chappy, as Uncle George takes bids on moving the team to New
Jersey...
glenn
|
88.3726 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | NEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPS | Wed Mar 26 1997 13:39 | 9 |
|
....says Chappy, Do you actually think Georges Ego is gonna let him
move out of NY city?
I don't think SO Tim.....
Chap
|
88.3727 | Money talks | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Mar 26 1997 13:51 | 10 |
|
> ....says Chappy, Do you actually think Georges Ego is gonna let him
> move out of NY city?
George will take his ego to the highest stroker. He's not a New
Yorker. He's from Florida by way of Cleveland. There's plenty room
enough in Jersey for both him and Trump...
glenn
|
88.3728 | Why dump Maddux? | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass in 1998 - Final Four! | Wed Mar 26 1997 13:56 | 5 |
| I heard that the Sox dumped thier Maddux today. I must admit that this
comes as a big surprise to me. He was their most effective middle
reliever last season. Has he been injured this spring?
NAZZ
|
88.3729 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Wed Mar 26 1997 14:20 | 8 |
| Nazz,
I think Maddux was their most effective middle reliever 2 seasons ago.
Last year he was out a lot with injuries [elbow, groin?]. Only mild
surprise on my part. They must figure they have others who are
better...goodness knows they had enough arms in camp to choose from.
Ted
|
88.3730 | | SALEM::LEVESQUE_T | Oh, yeah! The boy can PLAY! | Fri Mar 28 1997 11:48 | 10 |
| RE:3728
The 35-year-old Maddux, who was limited last season by elbow trouble
but had pitched well for
the Red Sox as a swingman in 1995 (4-1, 3.61 ERA), was given his
release. Past performance
evidently did not outweigh his 6.30 ERA in eight outings this spring,
though just the day before,
Maddux had said he assumed he was on the club. He was in line to be
paid $600,000.
|